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Scriptnotes, Episode 707: After the Hunt, Transcript

November 3, 2025 Scriptnotes Transcript

The original post for this episode can be found here.

John August: Hello and welcome. My name is John August and you are listening to Scriptnotes, it’s a podcast about screenwriting and things that are interesting to screenwriters.

I love talking to screenwriters about their experience getting their first movies made because it’s the difference between writing a script and actually creating a movie. Last year, we had Justin Kuritzkes on to talk about his experience with Challengers and Queer, back-to-back with Director Luca Guadagnino. Today, we’re here talking with Nora Garrett, the first-time writer of Guadagnino’s current After the Hunt. Welcome, Nora.

Nora Garrett: Hi, thanks for having me.

John: I’m so excited to talk to you because I think one of the reasons why I love this as an example is we have so many listeners who are working on their scripts, they’re aspiring writers, they’ve written some scripts but they’ve never gotten a thing made. And so that transition point between like, these are all the words I have on paper and this is a movie that’s actually existing in theaters, just talking through that process gives people a sense of the journey. Craig and I could talk about it and our experiences, but that’s not what happens in 2025 and you have just gone through this process.

Nora: Yes, that is true.

[laughter]

John: I’m sure there were moments that were great and moments that were surprising and fantastic and also terrifying.

Nora: Yes. Oh, I mean, there were so many moments of abject terror that I felt like I was just in a complete state of disassociation watching myself go through it and be like, be cool, relax. [laughs]

John: Yes.

Nora: Yes, it happened really fast. It’s interesting to be on the back end of it now looking back.

John: Cool. I want to talk about your journey as a writer, sort of getting up to this point, getting this in the hands of a director who actually made your movie with Julia Roberts starring. Because we have the actual script in front of us, I want to talk a little bit about the words on the page and your experience writing those words, but then seeing like, oh, those actual actors have to do these things and that whole process.

Nora: Yes.

John: And revisions, probably the most revisions you can also imagine. I saw from the cover page, you went to double white, so you went all the way through the colors.

Nora: Yes, we sure did.

[laughter]

John: We’ll also answer some listener questions. Then in our bonus segment for premium members, I want to talk about day jobs, because until very recently, you had a day job doing other things, and I want to talk about what your experience has been trying to have an identity as the person who is a screenwriter and a filmmaker and an actor, but also the day job of it all.

Nora: Of course.

John: Cool. Well, let’s get into it. You and I are both from Colorado, so.

Nora: Oh, my gosh. Really?

John: Yes. I saw that you were born in New York. Were you raised in Evergreen?

Nora: Yes, I was raised in Evergreen. Wow, where are you from?

John: Boulder, Colorado.

Nora: Oh, my gosh, amazing. Wow.

John: Talk to us about Colorado, because my experience of Colorado was that I had no idea how lucky I was growing up there. Then you go back and like, “Oh, my God, this place is so pretty.”

Nora: That was exactly my experience. Exactly. We moved from New York when I was four, but I was adamant that I was a city girl to the point where I have vivid memories of touring the houses that we eventually lived in Evergreen. I was telling the real estate agent, I was like, “I’m a city girl, I don’t belong here.” [laughs]

John: You’re four. Yes.

Nora: I’m four. I’m four. I think my father at that point was like, that’s when he was like, “I don’t understand. I don’t know what to do with this girl.” It wasn’t until I left Colorado to go to NYU and then came back from the city that I realized that this is such a gorgeous, bucolic place to live. My experience of Colorado, and I think it’s still true, is that it’s a pretty big artistic town in the middle of the country.

John: I grew up in Boulder. We had the Shakespeare Festival. For not being at a hub, we had a lot of cultural things.

Nora: Exactly. I was dancing at first at Colorado Ballet and then I transitioned to acting and I went to Denver School of the Arts, which is a local magnet arts high school. I think that there was a lot of local theaters and a lot of local theater that I was able to be involved in alongside the Thespian Convention and the Shakespeare Festival. I always felt like Colorado had a liberal and an artistic bent to it, even despite being in a landlocked state. [laughs]

John: Can you talk to me briefly about dancing? Because you’re the only person I know who’s gone from dancing to screenwriting. Dancing, my perception of it, especially ballet, is that it’s all about reducing differences between things, being flawless, and practicing thing until it’s absolutely perfect. Then I don’t want to say you’re interchangeable with other people, but there’s just no flaws to be seen. Did you love it? Why did you stop dancing? What got you out of dancing?

Nora: Sure. That’s a very astute observation. I think that I loved ballet. I loved it so much because of the regimentation that you’re talking about, I think. I think I was someone who really responded well to structure and that’s been true throughout my entire life. I responded really well to six days a week, very rigorous, two to three hours a day of ballet. I responded to the same rigor when I went to school and took that really seriously.

I think having parameters was important to me, but it’s a ruthless job. Ultimately, I stopped because I had sort of a prescient notion at the age of 13 that I was like, I’m never going to be a prima ballerina. The best I can hope for is corps de ballet. Just because my body simply didn’t do the things that they needed. I didn’t have clean lines. I don’t have hyper-extended elbows or knees or really good turnout. What I did get from that experience was a certain amount of discipline, regimentation, but also it was very performative. There was a lot of opportunity for performance at Colorado Ballet because it’s not like ABT where it’s super competitive to get in the nutcracker.

John: I shared your love of just being, for me it was like testing and standardized testing in school. I loved actually just being right and knowing that I finished the thing and I was done and I’ve gotten the correct answer. I loved that there was a correct answer. While I was always good at writing, and I loved being praised for writing, there was something just really comforting and nice about just like, oh, no, I got like 100% on the test, and that was really easy.

So much of what we’re doing now, there is no right answer and there’s no perfect word for this thing. There’s no perfect scene. You’re always dealing with the imperfection of it all. Going from ballet, which you’re right or you’re not right to acting, there’s no right performance. What was the transition there?

Nora: Yes. Again, really great questions. I feel like the ballet of it all, I mean it’s really just containers, right? I don’t know. I got familiarized with Anne Bogart’s work in college, but she’s a director who talks a lot about the container of something and specifically the container of archetypes. I think with ballet, there’s a really rigid container of steps, but there’s still room within those steps for expression.

A lot of ballerinas take acting lessons because you don’t have words, so you really have to give an ontological experience of emotion to the viewer. I think that with acting, I thought there was a right way, for sure. I was not able to enter into going from pretty much regimented dance to regimented acting classes. I was not able to segment my brain and be like, okay, there were steps that I learned and there were perfect ways to do things in this medium and there’s not in this medium. I thought those two things were transferable to my own detriment, really.

John: To some degree, in musical theater where there’s a track, and to learn a track, you have to drop in that thing, I have such respect for the swings who can come in and just go through any track and a thing, but it really is not directly comparable, the experience.

Nora: No.

John: We have a lot of guests on the show who’ve gone through improv classes. They always were recommending improv classes. The thing about that is there’s no time to stop and make the perfect choice. You just have to continue with what you’re doing.

Nora: Absolutely, yes. I think for acting, it’s something where you can really get into a point where I’ve certainly been there, where you just belabor the thing. I think that it took me a long time to realize that sometimes, especially for someone who can be really cerebral like me, it’s better to just get yourself into a different track and just go with the first instinct as opposed to trying to find the perfect choice.

John: We had Greta Gerwig on the podcast a while back and she was talking about coming out of the mumblecore tradition and how she loved and respected a lot of it, but she got really frustrated that there wasn’t a text to anchor yourself back down to. You felt like as an actor, it was just too terrifying to have nothing underneath your feet to get back down to and that she felt like she could actually push much further once there was a text underneath there.

I hear some of what you’re saying there. It sounds like ballet, yes, you’re getting every step right, but then you’re finding ways to express yourself within that. As an actor, if you have scripted lines, you know those scripted lines, you’re making choices about that rather than every other moment.

Nora: Right. I think that the best-case scenario as an actor is you get to the point where you know the lines so well that everything feels spontaneous within the structure of the memorization and within the structure of having the understanding of your character. Everybody gets to that point differently, which I think was something that took me a really long time to understand. Some people really need to focus on every single line and the motivation behind every single line in order to trick their brain into being spontaneous, and some people can’t do that. They have to just veer straight into the spontaneity. I think I was very convinced that I was like, no, there’s one method and I must find it. [laughs]

John: Was that the reason for going to NYU was to find that method, to find that answer?

Nora: I knew I always wanted to be back in New York, which based on my four-year-old dictums, I think.

John: It’s Eloise returning [unintelligible 00:09:52] and stopping that, yes.

Nora: Exactly. I read all the Eloise books. I read Eloise in Russia. She went to Russia.

John: Of course, she did. Yes.

Nora: Of course, she did. There’s hotels in Russia. I was very adamant that I was like, I’ve got to be back in the city. I belong in the city enough with like, I don’t know if you felt this when you left Colorado, but I met people who didn’t know what elk were.

John: Oh, yes, of course. Yes, absolutely. They’re not necessarily like, no, they’re these giant wild creatures who doesn’t wander through your backyard. Yes.

Nora: Yes, exactly. They’re bigger than deer. I was like, “Oh, yes, everybody knows what an elk looks like.” My first friends at NYU were like, “No, you know what an elk looks like. We do not.” I think I was in high school looking back on it. I think that I was told I was a talented performer. I don’t think that I was going off of a feeling of like, wow, I love this and I’m obsessed with this and I just want to follow this. I think I was chasing the feeling of being good and of being someone who was talented and had that sort of external validation. It wasn’t until I got to NYU that I was like, “Oh, I really love this.”

John: Can we talk about NYU? Because I visited New York in college and was like, “Oh, this is overwhelming.” Specifically, the NYU area is just an overwhelming place. My daughter did a summer program there in high school. She’s a city kid. We lived in LA and Paris. She’s like, “I can’t handle the street harassment. Just the daily life of it all was tough.” What was your experience coming from Colorado to a place like NYU?

Nora: My family lived in New York for a really long time, like my extended family. I would go back and visit. I think what I was super attracted to was the autonomy of it. I’ve always been someone who was like–

John: Yes, developing quickly.

Nora: Yes, very quickly. I think that I felt like a person who was an adult faster than other people, which not true, but I felt that way. I’ve always been really attracted to the notion of being there and you can get yourself wherever you want to go and you’re not reliant on anybody else to get you there. There’s a certain amount of autonomy in that respect that I wanted to have. I was desperate to get out of home. Not because of anything bad, but just because I was like, I want to be alone.

John: Also, you’re like the protagonist in your own story and you recognize that you have to leave home in order to have your great adventure.

Nora: Yes, exactly. Yes.

John: When did you read your first script? You probably read some plays in high school, but when did you get the first sense of that when it wasn’t like another classic play that you’re reading?

Nora: That’s a good question. I have to think about that. I read a ton of plays for a very long time, but also read a lot of books. That was my first introduction to writing was just being a huge nerd and reading a ton. I remember very distinctly learning how to use a parenthetical for the first time as a very young kid. [laughs] I think that it must have been in college because of– I want to say that I’ve read a script before this, but we did have a class I think my sophomore year of college, where it was acting for film within the container of, you’re at a school for acting for the stage.

We read The Talented Mr. Ripley. The goal of the class was to learn a certain filming technique as opposed to a theatrical one. We read The Talented Mr. Ripley seven times, I think, back-to-back. That was probably my first experience. I remember being really struck by how little was on the page compared to plays.

John: Let’s talk about that, because classically when I look at plays right now, there’s sometimes a lot of scene descriptions where it’s setting up to look at the thing, but then there’s pages and pages and pages of dialogue. What you’re saying, it’s like The Talented Mr. Ripley, and this is for an acting exercise, so it’s really about how are you able to communicate to when the camera’s enclosed, what is the edges of your frame? What was not there on the page that you were expecting to be there?

Nora: More, I think. [laughs] I just thought–

John: You thought it would be much more scripted in terms of every little movement, every step?

Nora: Yes. I thought it would be– it’s not only about stage direction, because I think also, I was very obsessed with the canonical plays. I loved Edward Albee. I loved Tennessee Williams. Tennessee Williams stage directions are verbose. It is just like a stack of stage directions or very stacked, rather, I don’t know. I think that going to reading The Talented Mr. Ripley, I was like, “Oh, this is so much about the actor’s performance.” I think that that varies script to script, because now I’ve read so many. In that one particularly, I was like, oh, wow, it really is about who you are as an actor bringing yourself to this, because it’s not the same type of roadmap, I think.

John: Also, you look at the differences between a stage play and a screen play. A screen play only needs to be filmed once. It only needs to be actually acted once. Those scenes, they’re going to do it once and they’re going to be done. You can experiment with that versus stage play. In theory, this is a set of instructions for creating basically the same experience again and again and again, no matter who’s in those tracks and who’s in those roles.

Nora: Exactly.

John: That’s an inherent difference between those two things. You’re reading The Talented Mr. Ripley. You start probably reading some other things. When did you start acting in people’s films? Were you acting in shorts while you were at NYU? What was the first time that you were on a set with a camera aimed at you?

Nora: Sure. I did start doing short films in school. I think they really started kicking off probably around the summer after my junior year because NYU and specifically Stella Adler, where I was studying, they have a very rigid– It’s so funny to look back on it now because the stakes felt so high, but they basically were like, “You’re not allowed to act anywhere beyond the confines of this school until your junior year,” which not everybody subscribed to. Again, I was the rule follower and someone who was very serious about this education. I felt like, okay, I’m not ready. I’m a nascent creature. Then I have to wait until one teacher tells me I can go off.

Yes, it was probably around summer of junior year. I have done so many short films, some of which have seen the light of day and some of which have not. I think that I’d probably be terrified watching them back now. I think it all started because I was dating a guy who was very into film. I think his friends were also very into film. They were these people who were involved in the acting school, but they knew they wanted to go to Hollywood. They knew that they wanted to be screenwriters. They had a–

John: They’re the worst. They’re terrible people.

Nora: I believe the term is film bros now. If I’d had that verbiage, I would have used it back then. They’re still my friends to this day, but they had an encyclopedic knowledge of film. I grew up watching Legally Blonde, Charlie’s Angels, Liar Liar, and The Big Green on repeat. I was like, those are my four. That’s what I’ve got.
[laughter]

John: [unintelligible 00:17:01] right.

Nora: Yes, exactly. They had seen everything. I felt like, “Oh, those are the people who make this,” but they were also very committed to making short films. Because I was dating this guy, and I was an actor, I got into that web.

John: We have a lot of listeners who are making short films. What advice could you give to them about having been in a bunch of short films and student short films and posts? What are good experiences? What are bad experiences? What are things you wish those directors had a better sense of when they cast you in something?

Nora: Great question. I feel like I would say really use short films as a sense of experimentation. I think I took everything very, very seriously. I felt like I never knew what short film was going to catapult me to fame. [laughs] That’s what I felt like. Honestly, I was like, “Someone’s going to see this, and then I’m going to be famous at the age of 20.” It’s just not that. You’re making stuff with your friends, and it’s really, truly a time to learn and expand and make really bold choices that may or may not work.

I think that when no one’s watching, it’s really the opportunity to veer into that and steer into that scope. I think as an actor, it’s a great time to learn about your own process and what works for you and watching yourself back, and trying to figure out the dissonance between, oh, this is what I meant to do, and this is what’s actually on the screen. I think everyone in the short film process probably feels that way. Yes, that’s what I would say.

John: I’m friends with some folks who’ve been making a bunch of short films using folks who are very good at social media. These are folks who film themselves constantly. I think that’s one of the things that’s going to be fascinating to watch 10 years from now is how many of those people graduate towards doing bigger, longer, expanded things. These are people who get a chance to iterate all the time.

I think what you’re describing is that they can just constantly experiment, but they’re not used to the sense of an ongoing narrative. They’re used to a 90 seconds, but if you have to tell a story in 5 minutes or 10 minutes, it’s just a different beast. Or if you need to work with a larger, more experienced crew, it’s not just you setting up lights yourself. It’s a different thing. I’ll be fascinated to see how that works.

I’d love to just push a little bit more on, you’re an actor who’s agreed to be in a short film. What are your expectations going in? What do the directors and people who are helping out to make the film need to know about? How do they make it a good experience for an actor?

Nora: Sure. Okay. I feel like some of my best experiences were when you knew that– It’s a couple of things. I think you want to feel like, especially with short films where it’s sort of run and gun and everybody’s doing a lot of different jobs, I think you want to feel like your voice is being heard and you’re being valued as a creative entity within the film.

I think it’s important that you know that you’re going to be taken care of throughout all the process, throughout all the extenuating processes after you film. I think it’s important to, and again, this might not be important to everybody, but I think it’s important that you know what cameras you’re shooting on and you know that those cameras are going to look really good, that even if this isn’t a perfect product, you’re going to have something that’s really good for your reel and that it is going to be edited and that there is going to be a final product that you can eventually see.

John: That it actually goes to you and it disappear.

Nora: Exactly. That’s happened to me before. I’ve shot shorts that never seen the light of day. I think it’s much more holistic when you understand that this is going to be something that you can watch because everybody needs it at that point. It’s not the same thing where you’re like, okay, well, I committed my time and energy for free. The promise of that is I’m going to have something to look at at the end of the day. I think it’s a matter of short films are so stressful. I do think there’s a certain way that you have to protect your cast from that stress.

John: Some of these short films you were making with friends, which is great and that’s a safer experience, but were there things where you just auditioned, like you saw, noticed, and you went and auditioned for, you submitted for, and you were just working with strangers?

Nora: Yes.

John: What is that like as a person? You probably didn’t have reps or you had no one on your team at that point. How are you making sure that this is going to be a good situation that you’re actually safe?

Nora: [laughs]

John: For example, would you only meet in a public place or would you go to a place-

Nora: Oh, sure.

John: -where there’s an apartment? I would just love some good advice.

Nora: Yes, of course. I mean–

John: I’m not thinking just for our actors who are listening, but for filmmakers, make sure people feel good about the experience.

Nora: I think something looking back on my experience, especially immediately post-collegiate when I was auditioning a lot for these– I was on Backstage, I was on Actors Access. I did a big cattle casting call for Columbia Film School, which was actually one of the best. I did the same thing for USC when I moved out here. Those were some of the best experiences because you’re meeting film students who are doing their MFA and you’re auditioning in Columbia and you know that it’s the container of the college, so you know that all these people are very committed to doing something and making something and have the resources.

I don’t know if I ever auditioned in someone’s living room. I’m sure I have, but I think for Friends, I think there’s a certain desperation of a young actor that really, at least for me, I would have done anything. You know what I’m saying? I think I would have gone anywhere, seen anybody, done anything, because I was like, again, I was just like, put me in pictures kind of thing. I was just like, “I’ve got it.” I think also there’s a lot of stuff told to young actors that is really hard and harmful. I don’t know if you watched The Rehearsal.

John: Yes.

Nora: Yes, but I was watching it this most recent season and it just broke my heart, because I was like, “These people just want the opportunity to be on HBO and it feels like, God, I really recognized myself in that.” I was like, “I would have done anything too. I would have made out with someone for 12 hours on a soundstage.” Because there’s a certain amount of you just really– you’re told for so long that this business is impossible and you’re told that you have to do whatever it takes and you’re told that no one’s going to make it. Part of doing whatever it takes is sometimes, I think, hopefully now it’s different, but compromising what you believe to be artistic integrity or just the integrity of self. Yes.

John: As an actor, you’re constantly waiting for someone else to pick you to do a thing. As a writer, you can just write your own thing. When did you start writing in screenplay form? When did that start off?

Nora: I always wrote since I can remember, and started with prose and really bad poetry. Got into slam poetry in high school, which is embarrassing, but I feel like I should say it.
[laughter]

John: If you say it enough, the shame will just go away. This is a part of your identity.

Nora: Exactly. That’s what I’m hoping. That’s what I’m hoping. I’m hoping that if I say it-

John: Slam poet.

Nora: -then everyone’s like, then I–

John: Former slam poet, Nora Garrett. Yes.
[laughter]

Nora: If you only knew. Yes. I got really deep into it.

John: Oh, yes. We’ll find it. We’ll find it. [crosstalk]

Nora: Oh, yes. It’s so embarrassing, but I loved it. I think the web series was the thing when I was graduating college. Everybody was making a web series. I was acting in a web series, and so I wrote a couple of web series. They were just bad. They were bad. I think it was also the Girls’ renaissance.

John: Oh yes, of course.

Nora: Everything was that feeling of like, oh, I am also an almost 20-something living in New York. I can also write about my life in this way. It’s only now that I look back and realize how detailed and nuanced and brilliant Lena Dunham is and how you can’t repeat that. That’s what we were all trying to do. Yes.

John: You’re writing those things and you’re writing stuff that you would shoot immediately after. At least there was a feedback loop. You could say like, oh, this is what was on the page. This is what it’s actually like to try to make the thing. This is what it looks like in editing. You do get a lot of experience that way.

Nora: Yes. My last semester at NYU, I did Stone Street, which is the film and television studio. That was really like we would write things and then shoot them in the studios. They looked horrible. They were just awful. I would love to think that I had the cognition at the time to have any creative feedback about the artistic process, but I think I was really just caught up in how starkly insane it feels to see yourself on film for the first time. I think it’s also when you make something and the distance between you making something and what actual film looks like is so vast that you’re just like, oh, this isn’t even that art form.

John: No. [chuckles]

Nora: This is literally like a camcorder. Yes.

John: Yes, absolutely. It’s an image on a screen, but that’s really about as close as we got there.

Nora: Right, exactly. You’re like, oh, these are pixels arranged in a way that they’re supposed to be arranged, but this is not film. Yes.

John: When did you write your first full-length feature-y script?

Nora: The truth is, is that After the Hunt was my first full-length feature.

John: That’s great.

Nora: Yes, that is the truth. [laughs]

John: Talk to us about the idea of it and going into it. I guess we should say that I saw it a couple weeks ago, but most of our listeners probably won’t have seen the movie yet. How do you describe it? Maybe describe what your initial intention was for it, and if it’s different than the final thing, tell us what changed.

Nora: It all started with the character of Alma, which is played by Julia Roberts in the film. Again, at the time, was not played by Julia Roberts. I thought, wouldn’t it be interesting if there was a character who had, at the core of their identity, a secret? This secret is something where I thought it could go one of two ways. I think I was also very obsessed with the notion of success and successful people, probably because I had been outside of the realm of success for so long, and I was trying to gamify the system in a way, but I was obsessed with the price of it, and not necessarily the external price, but the internal price.

I had just listened to a podcast called Liars, I think, a part of This American Life. Basically, the upshot of that was that statistically, people who are more successful in our patriarchal capitalistic society are people who are better at lying to themselves. That can ensure more success. I thought, A, I felt validated by that, but B, I was like, wow, what a fascinating notion? Again, what’s the cost of that? Because I felt like there had to be some sort of internal cost.

Alma was this character who I thought, okay, if she has this secret about something that happened in her childhood, but at an age where you’re coming online enough to understand what you’ve done, how do you metabolize that into your adult life and specifically when you start having adult relationships? Then how do you think about yourself when you start reaching for professional success? Does this lie, does this ability to obfuscate and compartmentalize really help, or is there an eventual consequence?

John: From that initial instinct, were you trying to feel like, well, what is the perfect vessel or vehicle to explore this thing? The Julia Roberts character is a professor of ethical philosophy at Yale. She’s uniquely obsessed and caught up with these questions of what is truth, how do you live an ethical life? She has this secret at the start of it. Was that baked into the idea initially?

Nora: Yes, it was baked into the idea initially. I think when I was thinking about the first logline, I did think about the professor and student relationship. Having her be a professor of epistemological thought or ethics was my tongue-in-cheek way of being like, oh, she literally teaches something that she has not fully synthesized within herself. It was the expansion of that initial feeling of the dissonance of someone who lies to themselves about their own experience.

John: Yes, so very classically, the people who study psychology or psychiatry often have their own stuff that they’re wrestling with and digging through. It makes sense to put it there. One of the things that strikes me so great about that setup is Craig and I have talked for years about how it feels like there’s a paucity of female characters who have to make ethical choices in movies.

The thing we always do for [unintelligible 00:30:09] is about Episode 483, Philosophy for Screenwriters. We were talking through that and that we don’t see it. In this case, your creative character was just so exactly wrestling with that situation. Tara was another example of that. When you have this central question that you want to explore, did you know what the genre was going to be? Because I’m not even quite sure what genre to put your movie in, the finished movie. What do you consider your movie?

Nora: Yes. I think the genre that it started out initially was the psychological thriller. Because I think that, to me, the question at the heart of a lot of psychological thrillers is what is real? I think that is something where that question, when you put it internal as opposed to external, when you’re like sort of what is real that I think, what is true, what is false, what is true, and what is false in what’s happening right now, that to me is the source of that almost psychosis or that feeling of just like, what can I trust? Then I think Luca was more interested in how do we create something that feels more like an adult drama?

John: Adult drama or melodrama, which is a word that has a negative connotation right now, but we used to make melodramas. Is there something delightful about the drama is the drama in a way?

Nora: Yes, of course. Yes. I think he was really interested in making the theatricality of a psychological thriller into something that felt a little bit more drawing room, a little bit more lived in. Yes.

John: Let’s talk about Alma and all the balls you have her juggling. She is a professor seeking tenure at Yale. There’s that whole issue. She has a graduate student, a PhD candidate student who is daughter-like to her, but also obsessed with her and is potentially a problem. She has a marriage which is okay but has some weird dynamics and strains in it. Her husband is a psychiatrist.

She has a best friend who’s also in the department and they have a complicated relationship, an Andrew Garfield character. She has some medical condition, which I’m not quite sure what it is weighing on her. She has a secret. She has a secret from before. She has a comfortable life, but a lot of things pull in her in different directions. In other stories, one of those might be sort of enough, but there’s a lot happening there. Then these aspects conspire to make things even more complicated for her. How much of that did you know before you started putting pen to paper?

Nora: I think something I should say is that I started writing this screenplay as part of a class that I was part of a group of female writers who we’ve all share our work with each other. One of them had written a rom-com and she told us all that she was like, I took this really great class. The whole thrust of it was that you’re just going to finish your first draft in 12 weeks. Basically, the idea–

John: That’s a classic sign-up kind of thing.

Nora: Yes, exactly.

John: A boot camp, like you’re just doing it.

Nora: 100%. You’re just doing it. I thought, okay, I’ll do that. That could be a great way to sort of put a container around something that can be a little bit nebulous sometimes, which is the work ethic.

John: [unintelligible 00:33:26] containers I’ve heard so far.
[laughter]

Nora: Yes, containers. [laughs] I do. I love organizing. I used to be a professional organizer myself. [laughs]

John: Oh, okay, great. Yes. We’ll get to that in the bonus segment.

Nora: Yes, exactly. A lot of these decisions, and we talked about this, you touched on it a little bit earlier, but a lot of the decisions had to be made really quickly. Part of that was really beneficial because you just got out of your own way. I think that it’s hard to look back and narrativize how much I knew prior. I would say that the triad of Julia Roberts’s character, Ayo Edebiri’s character, and Andrew Garfield’s character, who as Alma, Maggie, and Hank, that was something that I knew going in.

I think I wanted something physical, something that somebody could point to to see if this was someone who was very calm, cool, and collected on the outside. I wanted there to be something physical that you could point to that showed the degradation, the falling apart, or just maybe in more obvious terms that whatever you deny will show up in the body somehow, kind of.

I think also I was interested in substance use. I don’t know, just sort of that as somebody who was able to be high functioning across all levels while potentially being degrading to their body. I think especially as a woman and especially as a female character, women’s bodies are such where women are often made to take such good care of them. I was interested if you can take the Brad Pitt character where he’s constantly eating in half of his films and give that trait to a woman, which is, I realize, a horrible thing to make a female actress do. [chuckles] That notion of just hunger and a lack of concern for the body because you live such a life of the mind.

John: Great. Talk to us about the 12 weeks. Over the course of 12 weeks, did you finish the script? Did you get through it?

Nora: I did because, again, I love rules. I did finish it. Again, it was just really bad. I think all of it was a really good exercise in learning that just, I think for a really long time, I let great be the enemy of good. I was made to push past that and just realize if you get something down, it’s not the final iteration by any means.

John: Let’s talk about that, getting it from it’s finished to actually to good. What was the process there? Who were you showing it to? What were the drafts you were doing? What was that like?

Nora: I had shared a lot of my writing with a couple of really close friends, some of whom belonged to the cabal of people that I went to college with. I put the first draft away for a little while. Part of that was just necessity. I was in a period of time where I was changing jobs and I was applying for a bunch of different jobs and I was very financially stressed.

Part of that was by necessity and then part of it became just trying to not think about it for a little bit and return with a fresh perspective. Then I re-outlined, re-broke the second draft, re-wrote it, and then started sharing it. I started sharing it with a group of just really close trusted friends who had read a lot of my prose before and who I knew gave really good feedback and whose writing I also really respected. Then collected those notes, did another draft and another draft and then did a reading of it with my actor friends.

John: Yes, I was going to ask. Knowing actors, it felt like it would be a great way to hear some stuff and see what’s working there. What did you learn in that reading?

Nora: I don’t know if you have this, but there’s an enormous sense of terror and shame when people start reading your words out loud. [laughs]

John: Absolutely. All the things you’d never notice were like, oh, my God, that actually isn’t the text. There’s a missing word there. People are trying to make this line work.

Nora: Yes, 100%. Or I’m like, “God, I use that word so much, like container.” I’m like, “Oh, my God, what have I done? Why did I get obsessed with the word fruition? That makes no sense.” It’s, yes. After getting over the initial hot flush of feeling like this is so demoralizing and debasing, after that, I tried really hard to just step back.

I think it’s really important when anybody does a stage reading or a reading, it’s like I had actors who, it was during the actor’s strike, and so I got a lot of my friends who were actually really quite good, but they had no other job. It was amazing to just be like, wow, these are really good actors. If they are struggling with this moment or if this doesn’t sound right coming out of their mouth, then I know something needs to change.

John: Yes, if they can’t sell it, it probably is the line.

Nora: Exactly.

John: It’s not the person reading the line. Through this process, you got to a better draft. When did you get the draft in the hands of Imagine who ended up taking it? What was that process of I have this thing and now somebody needs to read this to try to make this?

Nora: It’s so funny looking back on that version of myself because I feel like–

John: Looking back, what, two years?

Nora: Yes, [laughs] looking back. It’s not long ago.

John: The younger me.

Nora: The younger me. No, but I think it’s– I’ve had for so long, I’ve been really timid and skittish about asking for favors, asking for help. The curse of going to an arts high school, the blessing and the curse is that I went to an arts high school and then I went to NYU. All of my friends, for the most part, there’s obviously attrition, but a lot of my friends are in the arts. You have this feeling of seeing a lot of people who you went to school with and you started in the same place and then suddenly you’re seeing people who are much, much, much more successful than you.

Again, that gap is one that can be difficult to close, but also, it’s that awkward thing of I don’t want to ask my friend to help me. I don’t know what, I really don’t know what changed. I didn’t have an agent. I didn’t have a manager. I had this script, and two of my close friends who have written a lot more than me in terms of screenplays, they were like, “I think this is good. I think you have something. You should start submitting it to competitions.”

I submitted it to the BlueCat Screenplay Competition and I got excoriated. The feedback was so bad. [laughs] I remember reading it and I was just like, “Whoa, okay.” [laughs] I think they issued some boilerplate statement that’s like, “We suggest you reapply or suggest you take this writer’s notes.” I don’t think he gave me notes. I think he was just like, “This is bad.”

John: You’re on the website now.

Nora: [laughs] Yes, exactly. Well, to me, it was a wonderful indication of like, wow, somebody can hate your work, hate it, and other people can really like it. There’s something crazy making in that because you’re like, “What is good?” I can’t say what’s good.

John: It’s a person who wants to get the checkmark of success. Like, no, you want an objective measure, and that there’s just no objective measure of any of it.

Nora: Exactly. It is that thing where it’s like okay, obviously, when the film comes out, we’ll see. There’s a big feeling of just like, “Okay, you hate my writing, and this person doesn’t hate my writing.” I think that I read the feedback, and I had that moment where you’re like, “Oh, I’m horrible. Everything I do is bad.” Then I thought, I don’t know, my friends like this, and I trust them, so I’ll take the cogent notes, the salient notes, and then I’ll just keep going. Again, I think that that’s an older version of myself would have completely capitulated and just been like, “You’re right, blue cat.”
[laughter]

John: “I’m embarrassed to tell this to you. I’m sorry for wasting your time.”

Nora: Yes, exactly. I asked a friend of mine who was representative. I asked him if he knew of anybody who might want to represent me, and he set me up with my now manager, Sidney Blank. I remember our first meeting really clearly because I was at my grandmother’s house in New York. I was helping my grandmother through knee surgery at the time and also working for Meta. I took off of Meta for an hour and a half to have this meeting.

I truly thought this script would be a sample. I truly thought because it’s the exact opposite of what everybody was telling me they wanted and what everybody was telling me to write, which is that it’s really talky. A lot of conversations, there’s a lot of $5 words, it’s very cerebral at times, there’s no major set pieces. I was pretty certain I was like, this would just be a really good sample, and I’ll be able to get in rooms, hopefully.

John: Getting a room on a succession-like show would be a dream with a script like this.

Nora: That was the dream, 100%. I was like, “Hopefully, I get a manager, and then hopefully, I start working in rooms.” Sydney was the first person who said, “I really think we can make this into a movie.” That was, I think, December of 2023, I think.

John: Yes, so recent.

Nora: It’s so recent or maybe two. I don’t know.

John: What are years?

Nora: What are years? It was very recent, though. Then that next year, which I think it– yes, God, I think it was 2023. Alan Mandelbaum at Imagine had just made Fair Play. Sydney knew Alan and thought that he would respond to the script and thought that it was in the lane of what he was looking to do or had done and was interested in. Incredibly lucky for me that she was right.

John: That’s great. Imagine read the script. Did they meet with you before they bought the script? What was the process?

Nora: I remember that meeting really well. Yes, they met with me, and I met with them, really. It’s also so funny going from auditioning and trying to get agents in this town and the stark difference between having meetings in people’s offices. I had a meeting once in like an ante room of CAA once, not even in an office with a door at 6:00 AM. It was so bad. Then suddenly going into meetings in boardrooms and I was like, “Oh, this is a very different process. This is a very different feeling of courtship.” Whereas before I’d been in the position of me trying to really sell myself.

It was a meeting with Alan and Karen Lundgren and Joyce Choi. Immediately, Alan just had really smart questions and a lot of incisive ideas and passion for the piece, which again, I was still at a point where I was just like, I can’t believe any of this is happening.

John: My first paid job was also Imagine. I went through there. Colorado and Imagine. Time shifted or something.

Nora: I have a podcast called Schmitschmoats.

John: It’s so good. It’s rising up the charts quickly. At this point, they’ve purchased your script, they’ve optioned your script, or what it will be?

Nora: No. It was just a meeting of– Then Sydney wanted me to have the experience of other people who were interested in meeting with him. I had a couple of meetings and then Imagine was pretty persistent about wanting to do it, so we decided to go with him.

John: That’s great. Did you do drafts for Imagine before you went off to find a director or did you go straight to Luca? What happened?

Nora: No. I think this was so atypical across so many different lines. It’s hard to say that because obviously, I don’t have another experience to draw from. I think that Luca is a director who moves very quickly. Once he signs on to something, his confidence is such where it was lovely to borrow from it. He’s like, “This is getting made. We’re going to get it made within the timeframe that I have.”

The process of it getting to Luca was one of those ones where it feels like a very charmed Hollywood experience where I didn’t even know that production companies had reps, but Imagine’s repped by CAA. Alan had come to the meeting with a list of directors that he thought would be right for the piece. Luca’s name was right up there at the top. They asked me after we decided to work together to hone in and find a smaller list of directors. I made a list of four people who I thought, okay, if these people even see this in their inbox, it’ll be the best day of my life, and Luca was in that little grouping.

We sent the script to his agent who happens to be married to Julia Roberts’s agent. Imagine really wanted things to be we keep it in the director sphere first, get a director attached, and then we go out to cast. The way it happened because of obviously their proximity, it got slipped to Julia Roberts. Then she actually came on first because initially, Luca had a scheduling gap. No, he had a film that was going. Then that film, for whatever reason, didn’t happen. Then he came on.

John: That’s great. Talk to us about your first meeting with Luca, your first meeting with Julia, for which she was involved in those early decisions. I just remember it is just so strange talking to a big director about this thing. You feel lucky to be in the room, but also, you’re trying to like, how am I going to both make the movie that I want to make and the movie that you clearly want to make?

Nora: I think it’s really difficult being a first-time screenwriter in some ways because– especially coming from the acting world and just having zero understanding of your positionality or power in these rooms. I think I felt like, “Wow.” I feel so lucky to be here across the board. Again, it all happened so fast that it’s hard to look back and be like, “Oh, what was–” It just felt like such a no-brainer choice. This is happening now. I think it would have been insane for me to, at that point, be like, “Luca, no thank you.” That’s crazy.

I think that the first meeting with Luca was actually so wild because I used to work at the Chateau Marmont. I don’t want to spoil things, but I used to work there, and he was staying there at the time. Our first meeting was there, and my old manager was there. I remember walking past the hostess stand where I used to stand until 1:00 AM every night, and he was there. I said it was like a meeting with Luca Guadagnino and he was like, “What?” This is a crazy experience of just being like, this is a place that I’ve been so many times in such a different capacity, and now I’m meeting with this person here.

I love Luca as a director, and I’d seen almost all of his films except for A Bigger Splash. I almost put off the meeting because I was like, I have to see A Bigger Splash. Then, of course, the one film he mentions in the meeting was A Bigger Splash.
[laughter]

Nora: I was like, “Oh, no, I knew it.” I think I was just trying to remind myself that I could speak cogently about this material because I had written it even in the face of someone who I was like, you’re just such a behemoth and someone who I really admire and respect and I have no idea.

John: It should be obvious, but you forget like, “Oh, that’s right.” I’ve actually been in all of the sets that are in this. I’ve been inside this entire movie for years, and so I really can describe everything that’s in here and why everything is in here. I might be defensive, but I actually do understand it. It’s not like if this script had plunked down in your lap and you put your name on it and went into that meeting, you wouldn’t have the ability to talk about what’s really inside it. You’re the only person who’s already seen the movie, which is- A hard thing to remember.

Sometimes as you’re talking to directors for the first time or actors, you forget like, “Oh, that’s right.” They’ve never been inside this. They’re just trying to find their way in. You had this meeting where they’re immediately like, okay, these are some big things that we’re going to approach and change and fix. What was the process of working with them?

Nora: I think Luca immediately felt like the ending did not work. I think that he was really interested in teasing out more of the thorny dynamics between the characters and the thorny social dynamics and really exploring the socio-political world in which these characters were in. I think that something I was scared of when all this was initially happening is I’d heard so many horror stories of people writing scripts and then studios getting involved and everything getting denuded and the teeth being filed down and everything becoming so commercialized.

I think something that was really special about having Luca at the helm of this film was that he has such a backlog of reputation and wonderful work that he’s really able to silo his creative experience and make it into what he wants it to be. I think he was really interested in punching out those themes and making things a little bit more gray, a lot less certain.

John: Entering the movies, if it’s worth the psychological thriller, there’d be probably a clean answer to how somehow these things sort out. My experience with watching the movies, I went to a 10:00 AM screening in Culver City with just myself, and I didn’t have anybody to talk about it with afterwards.
Fortunately, I grabbed a sandwich nearby, and there were three women who’d just seen the movie, too, and I heard them talking, so I could join their conversation as– Let’s talk about these three things because it very much is one of those movies where you want to have some discussion about what really happened there. For a movie about ethical philosophy, there are various shades of gray in terms of what people are doing and what the outcomes really are and how people got to the places they got to.

Nora: Yes.

John: Can we take a look at some pages from the script? This is how we’re starting the movie. This is the initial scenes as they’re meeting all the different characters. I want to just talk through some of your descriptions of who these people are. Emma Hoff, the Jill Robbins character, 51, beginning a typical day. We don’t give any specific more information with her at this point, but we’re going to see a lot of specific behavior from her. Frederick Mendelson, her husband. Can you read the description for him?

Nora: Sure. Frederick Mendelson, Alma’s husband, 53, handsome but fatigued, graying all over.

John: Great. I get it. Next, we have Hank Gibson. We meet him in that parking lot.

Nora: Hank Gibson, 40, Alma’s colleague, handsome and smart and scrupulous with both, having worked his way up the ladder at Yale from a lower-class background.

John: That last clause, having worked his way up, that’s not evidence that we can’t see that on screen, but we’re going to see it in his behavior later on. That’s just the cheating that we embrace in a screenplay.

Nora: I take advantage of that. [chuckles]

John: Next, we’re meeting Maggie Resnick.

Nora: Maggie Resnick, mid-to-late twenties, who bears a striking resemblance to Alma, if not an appearance, then an energy.

John: Cast in the movie, played by Iowa Deberry. Her being Black becomes an issue in the movie, but did you know it at this point? When you first wrote the screenplay, you didn’t know that.

Nora: No, I didn’t know it at the point. When I initially wrote the script, there wasn’t any specific notion of race.

John: Next, we have Patricia Engler.

Nora: Forties, a professor, emeritus of philosophy, the type of woman who is always losing her keys, her wallet, her badge.

John: Who is eating from a to-go container of soup and texting at the same time. It’s delightful. Again, it’s the specificity that I’m loving about these things. Then we’re meeting her almost in class. We’re going through a montage of scenes before we get to the opening title card for After the Hunt. We’re meeting Fabiola, not a housekeeper. She’s hired to help. She’s to do everything in person for the family. She would be the nanny if they had kids, but they don’t have kids. We’ll try to put this first three pages up, so people can download them.
There’s a lot of behavior, a lot of setting of worlds and establishing this two-professor family that makes a good income and has a very specific kind of New Haven’s apartment life, which was not in New Haven at all, right? It was actually in London?

Nora: It was actually in London, yes. Something that Luca is very rigorous about research. He has a research that he’s used on, I think, a lot of his films and used again on this one. He is very adamant about verisimilitude. He is a wonderful set designer who makes-

John: The sets are incredible. They feel so incredibly, again, specific. They’re always jammed. All these people are hoarders until you get to one point very late in the movie where we’re at a place that is incredibly spare and spartan.

Nora: Yes, exactly. That was all Stefano. It was to the point where it felt like immersive theater, where it’s like you’re walking-

John: You’re asleep no more.

Nora: Exactly. You’re walking around the sets and you’re opening drawers and you’re like, God, there’s actually what you would have in your drunk drawer if you were a philosophy professor in New Haven in 2019. This was what it would look like. He was very meticulous about that. I think that that’s a wonderful thing for actors to have, for sure. A lot of this initial scenes was something that Luca wanted as just a way to set up entering into these characters’ lives prior to feeling like, oh, we’re just at the fulcrum point.

John: Talk to us about the language, because we’re catching glimpses of them in class, and they’re just talking in what’s almost– It’s legalese or medicalese. It’s almost incomprehensible to what they’re saying to each other because it’s all just signifiers bouncing back and forth. To what degree did you know that as you were writing the first draft? How much of this came in later on? What was that process?

Nora: My cousin is getting her master’s in philosophy at Stanford. I really plumbed her experience and also literally some emails that she’s gotten from professors about announcing talks. The language that’s in the script is a very sanded-down version of the opacity that exists in that world. It is legalese. It’s jargon. Something when I was taking philosophy classes ad hoc, postgraduate, I was like, wow, this is really interesting because to me philosophy is something that is really a question of how to live and how to live morally and how to live well and how to live with integrity, which is a question that everybody has to answer. The barrier of entry is so high with these texts because they are so verbose.

There’s a part of me that loves the idea of you can say in a whole book what another person can say in five sentences, but there’s another part of me that feels like, “Come on, guys, just say the thing.” I did not have Alma teaching a lot in the initial draft. That was something where Luca really thought if this is someone who’s supposed to be at the top of her field, we should see her doing what she does. That required a crash course in philosophy beyond what I had already learned myself.

John: It also creates structural issues because you need to find where do those scenes go in a natural way that’s advancing the actual overall plot that we believe that she’s teaching this class differently because of the situations that are happening just before this and are happening after this.

Nora: Exactly, yes. How can we use those scenes that otherwise would be cut and dried boilerplate teaching scenes to heighten tension or add drama?

John: The tension reaches the boiling point. This is from page 80 of the script. This is a confrontation between Maggie and Alma just outside of a library at Yale. It starts with Alma coming up to Maggie who’s talking with their partner Alex and pulling her aside and becomes an actual full confrontation. It’s a centerpiece scene. Was this always in the script? Is that the thing that came along in the process?

Nora: Portions of it were always in the script, certainly towards the end of the scene. Some of the language in it is actor improv that was gleaned from rehearsals.

John: Oh, great.

Nora: Yes.

John: Talk to us about the rehearsal process.

Nora: Talk about being completely thrust into a world in which you’re just trying to have to tamp down your terror the entire time. Julia Roberts hosted us at her home for rehearsals.

John: Is it in New York City?

Nora: No, San Francisco. She’s lovely and so warm and disarmingly so. We had one Zoom prior where she gave notes on the script, so it at least wasn’t like a complete cold meeting. Luca basically ran it so that obviously, the actors were all very busy, so we had to stagger who was involved in rehearsals. Sadly, the only person who could not come to rehearsals was Michael Stuhlbarg because he was on Broadway acting. It started with just Julia and Andrew Garfield, Luca and I, and then slowly but surely, then Io came, and then it was Chloe, and then it was all of us.

John: How far in advance of production was this? Months?

Nora: Gosh. Not terribly far. I would say May, and then Luca went into prep in June. We started shooting early July, I think.

John: I’d love to read through some of this back half here because you’re at the point in the movie where people can more clearly state the themes and what their actual thing is. It’s not couched in specific language, or it could be a little more direct. If you put me at page 82, I’m nowhere near the actor. Anyway, Deborah is. I just want to read through some stuff here. She says, “I don’t feel comfortable having this conversation with you anymore.”

Nora: “Not everything in life is supposed to be comfortable, Maggie. Not everything is supposed to be a lukewarm bath for you to sink into until you fall asleep and drown.”

John: “There are no rewards in death for spending your life suffering as much as possible.”

Nora: “You’ve constructed a life that hides your accidental privilege, your neediness, your desperate desire to impress. At least I have the self-respect to be obvious about what I want. You, you lie all the time, living in an apartment 10 times cheaper than what you can afford, dating a person you have nothing in common with because you think their identity makes you interesting, fawning over me because you think my affection offers you credibility, another adoptive mother to replace your own insufferable one. It’s all a lie. It’s no wonder everyone thinks you lied about Hank, too.”

John: Again, it’s a moment where you actually can pull off all the niceties and things. You’re also answering an audience question. I was watching like, “Wait, if she’s rich, why is she living in that crappy apartment?” It’s rewarding the audience for that question you asked. You’re actually answering that question that was never audibly asked before. It’s like, “Why are you doing this thing?” Getting to express these, you’re not entitled to comfort, is an aspect too.

It’s almost like the audience is not entitled to a nice, tidy ending. It’s setting up, hopefully, the right invitation for the audience about what they’re going to get to because the question of what exactly happened, what all this history was and stuff like that, they’re going to be answered but not answered to the degree that here’s the clear, it’s not the sixth sense. It’s not Citizen Kane Rosebud. It’s not that kind of clear answer.

Nora: Initially, it was. Certainly, the drafts that were circulated was very much like you got the answer. I think you’re absolutely right that it is a sense of a metatextual working that Luca wanted to create, which is that these characters are saying these things to each other and the audience is having the experience that the characters might be having.

John: Well, congratulations on the script and on the movie.

Nora: Thank you. Thank you so much.

John: We have some listener questions that I think might be appropriate for you to help us answer.

Nora: Great.

John: Anita writes, “When is it appropriate to dramatize a scene versus having a character merely telling a story to other characters? How long can you go with a character who’s talking through something that happened to them without actually having to break in to show that?” A script I just turned in, I ran into that situation too. It’s like, okay, what’s too long where I don’t actually need to show the thing? I don’t know.

To me, it’s just, it’s the instinct. I’m like, is the audience going to be okay sitting in a place for a long time without doing it? Like Big Fish, there are some things where we do flashback and show the story, but there’s other times where you just tell the story. If it can be a half a page of dialogue and we feel like we could hold on to the after that long, I think my instinct is to stay. What’s your instinct?

Nora: I think it’s a difficult question. It was something that I thought about a lot with the script because there’s that feeling of how long can you hide the shark in Jaws. You know what I’m saying? How long can you make it? There’s going to be some sense of dissatisfaction, I think, when you reveal something, even if eventually, you move towards satisfaction in the end. There’s a sense of what the audience creates or what they bring to it is always going to be a little bit more juicy than finding out the real thing. I think I try to hold for as long as possible without being annoying.

John: The other thing to keep in mind is that if we have a character telling something, there’s still ambiguity. Is that character being honest? Is it not? Once you show something, the audience is basically saying, oh, it’s trusting the filmmaker. It’s showing the actual real truth. That’s not the case. You’re going to have to do a little more work to undo that dialogue.

Nora: Absolutely. Yes. I think it’s about rewarding people’s faith while creating as much tension as possible.

John: Let’s take one last question here from Nami. “I recently rewatched the first episode of The Twilight Zone, and it was building tension and releasing it and building and releasing over and over again. I was wondering if you could talk about how to build tension, if you have examples of movies or scenes, as well as how you tackle it or think about it.”

Tension and suspense comes when you feel like a thing is about to happen, but you don’t know when it’s going to happen. It’s the buildup to a sneeze. It’s the buildup to anything that triggers your mechanisms like, “Oh God, something bad is going to happen.” It can be as simple as the Hitchcock, there’s a bomb underneath the table, and you see the countdown underneath the table, or a longer-term thing where you’re just like, oh, there’s this sense of dread.

I think one of the issues that we’re living with as a society right now is that sense that there’s an overall tension. You feel like things could break at any moment. You’re just not quite sure when it’s going to happen or what it’s going to look like. In movies, you have to be always thinking about it as the writer. Are you adding to it? Are you dissipating from it? If you’re cutting into something that is unrelated, is that unrelated cut going to increase the tension because we’re still worried about what happened before, or is it dissipating, letting the tension out of a moment?

Your movie has a lot of tension in this building up to just mysteries that we’re trying to figure out. A lot of checkouts guns are being loaded in your movie. Any more instincts about tension and suspense?

Nora: First of all, I love The Twilight Zone. Again, I think it’s a delicate dance between feeling like what you have to pay off versus what is it perhaps more interesting to leave hanging, or what can you get away with not paying off and still satisfying your audience or still giving them a sense of agency as opposed to befuddlement.

John: All right. It’s come time for our One Cool Things. Do you have a One Cool Thing to share with our audience?

Nora: Sure. I’ve been really interested in Substack, recently. I think that it’s a great little corner of the internet when there’s a lot of scary corners of the internet. I also think it’s really great to just read Flash prose without deep commitment and also get inspiration. Jessica Tofino is a writer who runs a great Substack called Flesh World. It’s a lot about the beauty space. I’m really obsessed with optimization culture, especially as it pertains to physical appearance. There’s another man who writes, I think his title is Good Reader, Bad Grades. He writes flash fiction. I just started reading him, and I love it. It’s really tightly told and very evocative.

John: That’s great. A couple of things to respond to on there. Flash fiction as a concept can be great. These are little short bits. It’s almost the textual equivalent of TikToks where it’s just like, here’s the idea, you’re in and you’re out. Daniel Wallace, who wrote A Big Fish, has a book of flash fiction that is just delightful. I respond to it the same way. It’s like, just one more, just one more, just one more.

Substack is so fascinating, too, because there’s so many really good writers on Substack. Anytime you mention Substack, people are like, “But what about the Nazis?” It’s a tough thing where you can be frustrated by the business model in the space and that it’s corporatizing a bunch of independent voices, and yet also the time when publishing and media is struggling so much that people are actually being able to make a living writing is something worth celebrating.

Nora: See, this is a great example of how siloed the internet could be because I didn’t even know about any of that. [laughs]

John: Oh, that’s great. Literally, I’ll post something on Blue Sky about this post that I really liked, and the first comment will be like, “Oh, too bad. It’s on that Nazi platform.” I’m like, “Oh my God.”

Nora: Oh God. No, everything is ruined. I have to think of a new, cool thing.

John: The scolding that happens in popular culture is true, and that’s also part of your movie, too. Your movie is building off of reactions to me, too, but just the general sense of there’s no good way to be a decent person in the world.

Nora: No. I think it’s also a certain sense of, God, there’s nothing that seems particularly clean in this world now. Everything is touched, everything is tainted in some way, and it’s like how do you enjoy what is available to enjoy?
[laughter]

John: Well, not directly related, but my one cool thing is The Good One podcast by Jesse David Fox. We had Jesse on the show many months ago talking through comedy. The Good One podcast, it’s scripted, but it’s talking with- funny people about how they do their work. One episode I really liked recently was Ben DeLaCreme’s episode.

Nora: I love Ben DeLaCreme.

John: He’s an incredible drag performer who also does a Christmas show but talking through the behind-the-scenes of RuPaul’s Drag Race but also the bigger issues of being a creator who also has to think about producing and the overall notions of what is this space that we’re trying to do. You’re always grappling with, well, what is drag anymore? If drag isn’t dirty, is it still drag? All these issues. Just a great, smart conversation. One of many good episodes of The Good One podcast.

That is our show for this week. Scriptnotes is produced by Drew Marquardt and edited by Matthew Chilelli. Our outro this week is by Nick Moore. If you have an outro, you can send a link to ask at johnaugust.com. That is also a place where you can send questions like the ones we answered today. You’ll find transcripts at johnaugust.com along with a sign-up for our weekly newsletter. Those are called Interesting, which is lots of links to things about writing.

You’ll find clips and helpful video on our YouTube to search for Script Notes and give us a follow. You’ll also find us on Instagram @ScriptnotesPodcast. We have T-shirts and hoodies and drinkwear. You’ll find all those at Cotton Bureau. You can find show notes with links to all the things we talked about today in the email you get each week as a premium subscriber.

Thank you to our premium subscribers. You make it possible for us to do this each and every week. You can sign up to become one at scriptnotes.net where you get all those back episodes and bonus segments like the ones we referred to and the new one, we’re about to record on day jobs. Nora Garrett, thank you so much for coming on Script Notes.

Nora: Thank you for having me.

[Bonus Segment]

John: All right. Let’s talk about day jobs because you are now a produced screenwriter, but for a long time, you were doing other things along the way. Let’s talk about some of the different day jobs you’ve had, some pros and cons of a person who needs to keep a roof over their head but also have brain space and time to do the things they want to do. What day jobs have you had over your life?

Nora: What day jobs have I not had? I was a personal trainer. I was a personal assistant. I was a professional organizer. I was a data analyst. I was studying to be a paralegal. I was a waitress and a cater waiter and a hostess.

John: That’s good. That’s a whole range of things. Let’s talk about the service industry side first, because you mentioned how at Chateau Marmont, you had been a hostess at Chateau Marmont. Then you’re going there for a meeting, which is a very classic moment. That’s a movie moment right there.

Nora: Very movie moment, yes.

John: As a hostess or as a waiter, some pros I can imagine is you leave the job, you’re off the job, you’re done. Great. You probably have a little bit more flexibility when it comes for auditions, which is the thing you were having to do.

Nora: Yes. Being a waiter was one of my favorite jobs.

John: What kinds of restaurants were you waiting at?

Nora: I worked at Dominic’s before it closed down, may it rest in peace. It was a great restaurant. Then I worked at Crossroads, the vegan restaurant, which was– That was one of those environments where the chef was really totalitarian. You had to call him chef. That was my first experience of that. Then I worked at Little Dom’s and Chateau Marmont.

John: In picking those jobs or in giving those jobs, were you trying to optimize your hours to make your life manageable in a way that you could also write and do other things? Talk to us about that decision.

Nora: Yes. I always really enjoyed the flexibility of being able to be on a schedule that wasn’t a nine-to-five because not only could you get everything done that one needed to do during the day at a time where it wasn’t completely clogged with other people, but also, I liked being able to have my days free to write, to audition. The hard thing about working in the service industry is it’s like your days are free, but also, you’re working very late. There is that counterbalance of like there were times that I would write when I got home from work because you’re just so wired. You’re up until three, and then you’re sleeping until noon.

John: Talk to us about you’re waiting on these people. You’re waiting on decision makers. You’re waiting on parents, people who could be reading you, who could be casting you and things. To what degree is that a factor, or you just stop thinking about it?

Nora: I think the great gift of entering into this industry as an actor is the lack of control that you have in that profession is huge. The amount of control you have as a writer feels like the greatest relief in comparison. The thing that was always really difficult for me about being an actor was this feeling of like I can’t just go home and practice my instrument. I can’t go home and play violin, but you can go home and write. Then you have a product, and you have something that you can look at and read over and edit, and it’s immediate and pleasurable in that way.

There was a huge sense of frustration and a huge sense of, I think, impotence. Bradley Whitford, I think, talks about that. I think it was a commencement address at Juilliard or something like that. This idea that you have so much passion and desire and drive and need, and then you have this blockade of being like, “Well, if no one’s going to let me do this, I can’t do it.” I think it’s important to find something that’s lovely about working these type of day jobs in this city of Los Angeles is that almost everybody is trying to do the same thing as you. That can be demoralizing at times, or it can be really lovely to think like we’re all in the same boat, and so we might as well try to do something together.

John: If you were a waiter in Denver who dreamed of being a professional actor, well, you’re just delusional.

Nora: It’s like you’re in the wrong city.

[laughter]

John: Let’s talk through some of the other day jobs. Personal trainer? Was it personal shopper or a personal assistant?

Nora: Personal assistant. I wish I was a personal shopper.

John: That would be incredible. Personal trainer, I have many friends who are trainers, like my trainer, but other friends who train folks. Yes, you can set your schedule to some degree, but you’re always relying on other people showing up, not showing up. It doesn’t stop, I suspect.

Nora: No. Personal trainers do not get paid enough to teach classes. The people teaching your Pilates classes, your HIIT classes, they do not get paid enough. I was teaching a class that was-

John: You weren’t doing one-on-one clients. You were doing classes.

Nora: No, because I worked at a very fancy place where you had to teach the classes with the students. It was dance cardio because I used to be a dancer. It was very Jane Fonda adjacent. The reason I stopped is because I got a stress fracture in the middle of one of my classes. Being a dancer, I was like, it’s fine. I’ll go for another hour. I did. I was like, I’m in a lot of pain. That was the reason that job ended because I had to be in a boot after that. That was a crazy experience because it’s just I’ve never worked out so much in my life.

John: I have actor friends on Big Fish who would teach spin classes and things like that. It’s like, Jesus, your body.

Nora: You don’t even feel good. You’re a receptacle for food, and then you’re just constantly sweating.

[laughter]

John: Data analyst. This was at Meta.

Nora: This is at Meta.

John: Was that your last day job?

Nora: That was my last day job. I had taken a break from working in restaurants to be an assistant for the longest gig I had an assistantship for, which is about five years.

John: Assistant to what kind of person?

Nora: I did a couple. I did actresses, and then I had a stint with producers at CBS and then produce director. I bobbed around.

John: This was personal life stuff? Basically, get me this thing, deal with the plumber, that kind of assistant thing?

Nora: It was both personal life stuff, and it was also all of my on-set experience. I’d been on set a lot, which was invaluable. It was also partially writing experience as well and staffing and reading and coverage and all of that kind of stuff.

John: If you’re working, imagine like an actor on set and you’re a personal assistant for them, what is your relationship between it? Your first responsibility is to that person, but you also have to deal with the crew and production itself. How does that interface work?

Nora: It’s really difficult. I think being a personal assistant is one of the most fraught jobs because it’s all of the intimacy of an intimate relationship without any of the perks. I think it’s really difficult to hire someone to basically be a facsimile of you. Once they get good at it, I think there’s all sorts of identity politics that happen where you’re like, “I want you to be able to write my emails,” and you’re opening up your life to someone. I think it’s really difficult on both sides.

John: This does tie back into your movie then, of course, because I share everything with you. You don’t share anything back.

Nora: Exactly. This notion of like, oh, I’m being collected in some way, but I’m also collecting. I think the weird, tacit understanding of being a personal assistant is that obviously, most people who become assistants are trying to replicate a guild thing where you’re like, okay, I’m going to learn from you.

John: I’m the apprentice and you are this.

Nora: Exactly. That’s a difficult thing because you have to, I think as a boss, have to understand that your assistant has ambition. At the same time, if they’re really good, you don’t want to lose them. It’s a really strange dynamic. I think it’s difficult on both sides.

John: That gets us to meta. You just apply to an open job?

Nora: I went down the LinkedIn rabbit hole where I was– I mean, God, just throwing cover letters into the void. I think I was just at a point where I went back to restaurant work. I went back, and I was a counter service waitress at Pine & Crane.
Going back to a restaurant at 31 is much different than in my twenties. My body was just getting wrecked. I was getting really mentally exhausted and feeling really bad about myself, especially compared to my friends who had enough disposable income to go on vacations and do fun things. I was like, “Okay, someone’s got to give. I’ve got to figure something out.” I started the LinkedIn route. I was actually recruited by meta because of some editing work that I had done for a nonprofit.

John: Some video editing or some text editing?

Nora: Some text editing. Yes, some text editing and development that I had done for a nonprofit. They’ve recruited me to be a data analyst.

John: Let’s talk through your advice to, let’s say, the next Nora is moving out from New York to Los Angeles and is looking for a day job so that they can act or write. Where to first? Do you think restaurants is the right, best first place? What’s your instinct?

Nora: I love restaurants. I think especially because it’s where I earned all my friends. It’s where I earned. It’s where I met all my friends. I had to work. I think especially most people who are attracted to this business are people who really thrive on novelty. The lovely thing about a restaurant is that every day is different. You really observe human behavior from close proximity. It gives you a lot of wonderful skills of memorization but also performance. As depressing as it is to have spaghetti sauce on your hands and under your fingernails for five days out of the week, it’s like there’s also some type of brilliant resilience in that.

John: Cool. Awesome. Thanks for this.

Nora: Thank you. Thanks so much.

Links:

  • Read along with our excerpts from After the Hunt
  • Nora Garrett
  • After the Hunt
  • Episode 667 – The One with Justin Kuritzkes
  • The Rehearsal
  • Flesh World by Jessica DeFino
  • Big Reader Bad Grades
  • BenDeLaCreme on Good One
  • Preorder the Scriptnotes Book!
  • Get a Scriptnotes T-shirt!
  • Check out the Inneresting Newsletter
  • Become a Scriptnotes Premium member, or gift a subscription
  • Subscribe to Scriptnotes on YouTube
  • Scriptnotes on Instagram
  • John August on Bluesky and Instagram
  • Outro by Nick Moore (send us yours!)
  • Scriptnotes is produced by Drew Marquardt and edited by Matthew Chilelli.

Email us at ask@johnaugust.com

You can download the episode here.

Read the first 30 pages of the Scriptnotes book

October 30, 2025 Scriptnotes Book

scriptnotes book coverScriptnotes Premium listener Martin Schneider wrote in with a great suggestion:

Gentlemen, as a person who is very conversant in publishing and speaking entirely figuratively, I WOULD KILL TO BE ABLE TO HOLD THAT GALLEY IN MY HANDS FOR THREE MINUTES. It would satisfy some curiosity in me, and it would also spark an interest in seeing the rest.

So then I went to the website you have set up for the book and I clicked on the “SAMPLE PAGES” tab and looked at the inside of your book.

No, of course I did NOT do that because your website has no such section. I think you should have such a section, it is a perfect analog for a movie trailer, to give people a glimpse of the contents of the book.

We’ve all been to Trader Joe’s and we all know that giving you a cracker with a tiny slice of cheese on it can act as a doorway to buying a full box. You should do the same thing.

Martin’s right! We should have put up pages, and now we have.

Head to scriptnotesbook.com to read the first 30 pages of the Scriptnotes book.

You’ll see the table of contents with all our chapters and special guest interviews. Then read Chapter 1: The Rules of Screenwriting and our First Person interview with Christopher Nolan.

Next, please preorder your own hardcover copy!

The Scriptnotes book comes out December 2, 2025. But the time to order it is now.

Preorders are essential for the success of this book. They signal to bookstores and libraries that they should actually stock copies of our book. Plus, they might land us on best-seller lists, which would be kinda remarkable for a book about screenwriting (and things that are interesting to screenwriters).

Once you’ve preordered your book, send Drew a copy of the receipt → ask@johnaugust.com.

Next week, we’ll be sending out a BONUS CHAPTER that didn’t make it into the book: “Getting Stuff Written.” But only to folks who have preordered the book.

We can’t wait for you to read the Scriptnotes book. Get started with the first 30 pages right now.

Scriptnotes, Episode 706: Is TV Better Now?, Transcript

October 17, 2025 Scriptnotes Transcript

The original post for this episode can be found here.

John August: Hello, and welcome. My name is John August.

Craig Mazin: My name is Craig Mazin.

John: You’re listening to Episode 706 of Scriptnotes. It’s a podcast about screenwriting and things that are interesting to screenwriters.

Today on the show, television has changed a lot over the last decade, but has it changed for the better or for the worse, or is it a mix? We’ll talk about TV as experienced by viewers and by writers like Craig working in the medium. Then we’ll answer some listener questions. In our bonus segment for premium members, Craig, let’s talk coffee. You just had some coffee.

Craig: Yes.

John: I would say if you think screenwriters have strong opinions about formatting, you should hear some of them complain about coffee.

Craig: I think he said the keyword there, which is complain. God, screenwriters complain a lot.

John: That’s all we do. We sit around and we complain. You can hear some of those complaints live at the Austin Film Festival.

Craig: Segue man.

John: Reminder that we’re going to be at the Austin Film Festival. A couple of things on the calendar here. Thursday, October 24th, is the opening night party that Highland Pro, my company, is hosting. Come see us there. Drew will be there.

Craig: Drew’s a big draw.

John: You can see Drew in person.

Craig: Yes. I think we will–

John: Pull him from behind the mic right up front there.

Craig: People, do they want to touch the hem of your garment?

Drew Marquardt: Everywhere I go.

[laughter]

John: The opening night party is at the bar at the Driskill. That’s a crowded space.

Craig: Now, the Driskill had become a non-participant because they basically kicked the whole place out. I wonder why. I wonder what happened.

John: I think there is-

Craig: Mayhem?

John: -money and mayhem. They may also have been doing remodeling. Driskill is also a cool old hotel that was a weird fit in terms of space.

Craig: Yes, it was, but that bar is bananas.

John: It’s great for hanging out, but is bananas.

Craig: It’s crazy.

John: Friday, we’re hosting a Highland keynote at 10:45. We’re starting off a new feature for Highland. Craig, you at that same time are working with Alec Berg to talk about?

Craig: Oh, yes. Alec Berg and I are returning to do a second chapter of a panel we did years ago, Everything Everyone Is Telling You About Screenwriting Is Wrong, in which we go through all the advice you’re given. For instance, write what you know. We explain why that’s just wrong.

It’s very freeing, I have to say. You come there and you get liberated because if you’re going and you’re going to be at these panels, you’re going to hear a lot of what you’re supposed to do. Then you come to our panel, and we set you free from all of it.

John: Absolutely.

Craig: You got to do none of that.

John: That night, Scriptnotes, 9:00 PM, Scriptnotes Live. We’re back in the big room, and we’ll have special guests. We’ll do a couple of things. We’ll have some giveaways of the Scriptnotes galley. You’ll be some of the first people on earth to read the Scriptnotes book.

Craig: I will have one and a half glasses of wine.

John: I will have a nap, which will be great.

Craig: Oh, that’s nice.

John: Saturday, we have a Scriptnotes Live three-page challenge at 4:45 PM. When we do the live three-page challenge, the best part is the people come up on stage and we actually get to talk to them about their script and why they wrote it, and what they’re doing. We’re probably a little bit nicer because the person is in the room.

Craig: So much. Although I try to not be. I really do.

John: I try to give them information that they need.

Craig: I’m personally nice, but I’m not going to hold back too much.

John: For the three-page challenge that’s live at Austin, it’s the normal link you submit your scripts, journalist.com/three-page, all spelled out. There’s a special tick box on there now saying, I will be in person at the Austin Film Festival. Tick that box if you’re going to be there, and then Drew will know to look through just those ones for the pool of entries for this.

Craig: You’ll probably get four or five.

Drew: Just a couple.

Craig: Just a couple.

Drew: Handful. You just have to pick two of three.

John: Two, yes.

Craig: Easy.

John: We’ll probably have a special guest up there reading through these with us.

Craig: We usually do.

John: We usually do. Someone smart and great.

Craig: Somebody smart.

John: Fantastic. Come join us at the Austin Film Festival if you get a chance to. We don’t come every year, but we come most years, and it’s a good fun time. This past week, I went and visited the Entertainment Community Fund, which is the organization that helped us out when we were doing money for assistance during the pandemic. Do you remember that?

Craig: Sure do.

John: I distributed those grants. They are one of the main charities in this town who help support artists, but also crew members, anyone working in the entertainment industry who’s going through tough times. One of the things I wanted to highlight here is if you are a person who is working in the industry, who is on the verge of losing your health insurance, they have a whole special program which is just helping out those people to get them into short-term or long-term insurance solutions. Your instinct will be to go onto COBRA, which is maybe not the right choice.

Craig: Very expensive.

John: Very expensive. Notice to anyone listening to this podcast who’s like, “Oh, I’m going to lose my insurance at the end of the month or whatever,” we’re going to put a link in the show notes to talk to these people first because-

Craig: Definitely.

John: They have no vested interest in anything other than helping you get on insurance policy that’ll get you through, whether that be COBRA California or something else. It’s a reminder that it exists out there as a resource.

Craig: COBRA, unfortunately, fortunately, lets you buy the insurance you’ve been getting for, I think it’s a year or a year and a half. That’s your choice, is buy the insurance you were getting. If you’re getting insurance through the Writers’ Guild, it’s-

John: Crazy expensive.

Craig: -very expensive to buy. You’re better off seeking help with something like that.

John: An actor friend of mine ended up talking to them and getting on COBRA California and getting on Medi-Cal. It was good. It wasn’t as good as a SAG insurance, but it saved his ass.

Craig: It’s insurance.

John: It’s insurance.

Craig: It’s insurance.

John: Right now, all our European listeners are like, “You poor Americans.”

Craig: Yes, but I have things to say as well about their systems, which I’ve experienced.

John: Some follow-up. Scriptnotes book, we have signed editions now. Right before we recorded this podcast, Craig heroically signed 500 of these bookplates.

Craig: That was heroic. I got to tell you, I know people out there claim to be heroes, first responders, and so forth-

John: Craig, you doubted yourself. It seemed like, “This is going to be an impossible task,” and then you just banged it out.

Craig: Isn’t that the story of my life, John?

John: It really is.

Craig: Isn’t that me in a nutshell, doing the impossible?

John: Thank you to–

Craig: I wrote my name a lot.

John: You did write your name a lot. You didn’t even write your name a lot. You made two swirls next to each other.

Craig: Two swirls. When I was a kid, I don’t know, but I practiced my signature. The reason my signature looks the way it does is because my dad’s signature was equally garbly bizarre. I wanted to be like my dad, so I made my own version. Then I would just practice it over and over. It wasn’t like I was practicing it because I thought I would be famous or anything. I was practicing it because it just seemed like an adult thing to master. It served me so well now.

John: That’s great. I have two signatures. I have my signature for signing checks, and I have my signature, which is for signing other people’s merch. They’re substantially different. My merch signature is much more like a Walt Disney signature.

Craig: Sorry, you sign checks?

John: I’ve had to sign checks in the past. I don’t sign checks now.

Craig: How long ago? Actually, in my mind, I’m like, “When was the last time I signed a check?”

John: I signed a “check” for the other company like a week ago for– We gave a prize to this pitch competition, and I had to sign a physical check.

Craig: Wow.

John: Wow. There was a concern about the check, so they actually checked my signature.

Craig: Of course, there was a concern about the check because-

John: Why does the check exist?

Craig: What is this? My kids won’t know what it is.

John: No. Crazy.

Craig: Won’t know what it is, like they haven’t been born yet. They don’t know what it is.

John: Your future children won’t know what this is.

Craig: They won’t know.

John: If you would like one of these signed editions, it’s at a place called Premiere Collectibles. We’ll put it in the show notes, but you can just google Premiere Collectibles. You can pre-order them now, and the sticker will be in there, and you get a signed copy of the book. If you’ve already pre-ordered and you don’t care about this, thank you for pre-ordering the book. We’ve got hundreds of people send through their receipts to Drew. Keep doing that.

Craig: That’s crazy.

John: If you pre-order, send it to Drew. As we were signing, we were on the Zoom, we had a bunch of people who had pre-ordered before. We’re sending out special stuff to these people, including links to little live, streamy things. How many people did we have on the stream today?

Craig: That’s a great question.

John: We ended up with 80 questions we didn’t get to.

Craig: I think I was so under the avalanche of questions that I didn’t even see how many we had. We had 500 people signed up for it. That’s awesome.

John: That’s really cool.

Craig: That would make us one of the most popular videos on YouTube. 500.

John: 500.

Craig: 500 people.

John: 500 distinct people.

Craig: Let me hit triple digits. It’s a big deal.

John: We have some follow-up here from Patrick. We asked in Episode 704 about whether any three-page challenges had become movies, and Patrick had an answer.

Craig: Oh, that’s a good question. My project, Destination Earth, was a three-page challenge in, I believe, 2014. While it hasn’t been turned into a movie, I made it into a feature-length audio drama, which was released in 2020. Later that year, we were lucky enough to win the Australian Podcast Award in the fiction category. I think every writer has those favorite projects that never go anywhere. I’m glad this one’s out in the world in a format that people can enjoy and doesn’t have to linger in my projects folder, never to see the light of day.

John: The projects folder.

Craig: Yes.

John: You can listen to it at destinationearthaudio.com. Patrick, that’s great that you got this made. I would say that I would be surprised if a lot of the three-page challenges became movies because people were sending them through as test flight things. We weren’t picking the things we thought were the best things ever written, things that would be-

Craig: Instructive.

John: -instructive to talk about.

Craig: Out of any grouping of scripts, very few of them are going to get made. Out of the blacklist scripts, very few of them get made.

John: Let’s talk about scripts that haven’t been made. Drew, talk to us about Weekend Read because you’re the person who puts together collections. What is in Weekend Read, the app for iOS right now?

Drew: I’m doing ghost stories this week.

John: All right.

Drew: We have A Nightmare on Elm Street, American Horror Story, Beetlejuice, Coco, Crimson Peak, Doctor Sleep, Ghosts, Ghostbusters, Ghosts, the show, Insidious, Paranormal, Poltergeist, The Conjuring, Haunting of Hill House, Sixth Sense, and What Lies Beneath.

Craig: Where’s Blithe Spirit?

Drew: You always find the one that I couldn’t find.

Craig: You couldn’t find Blithe Spirit?

Drew: The play version of it, the Noël Coward play.

Craig: That’s worth it.

Drew: It’s great. That’s actually probably still protected.

Craig: Yes, I guess so, because it’s still being performed.

Drew: Absolutely.

John: If you want to read any of these–

Craig: You always find the one.

John: I love that you bicker. You have your own energy here.

Craig: I immediately go right to the one that he’s angry about. I knew it. Spent a lot of time. Where’s Blithe Spirit? Damn you. We did a big deep dive on Ghost. Is that right?

John: Yes, we did.

Craig: That was fun.

John: It was good. If you want to read any of these scripts, they’re up now in Weekend Read for iOS. Just go to the App Store and download Weekend Read. We had more feedback from Saleem on clipboard managers.

Drew: “Love the show, but the advice John gave in a recent episode on clipboard managers is already out of date.”

Craig: Thanks a lot, Saleem. God.

Drew: “MacOS Tahoe, which came out a few days ago, includes built-in clipboard manager as part of Spotlight. Mackie may be more capable. I use the clipboard manager in Raycast, and it’s also more capable than Apple’s new included offering. For neophytes such as Craig and others online, the best advice for them may be just to use Apple’s new built-in solution rather than a third-party app.”

John: I had no idea that macOS 26 included a clipboard manager. I’ll give it a look. I’m really happy with Mackie, which is free. Saleem, you’re correct. The simplest solution is the one that most people are going to use, which is great.

Craig: Sure. The word Spotlight caused slight spinal shuddering because-

John: I use Spotlight for opening apps. It’s all command.

Craig: Don’t even do that.

John: I don’t even do that. If you want to open an app that’s not currently running, how do you open the app?

Craig: Almost certainly it’s in my dock.

John: Everything’s always in your dock.

Craig: The ones that I use, but if I need something that isn’t there that I don’t-

John: You go to the applications folder.

Craig: I just go to the applications folder. I have it in my Finder window. I pinned it on the left side, so if you just click, boom, there.

John: I will Spotlight it and just start typing.

Craig: I’m a big Finder fan.

John: Not a big Finder fan.

Craig: I love the Finder.

John: I’m not as opposed to it as some people are, but–

Craig: I know that I like it more than a lot of people, but what does blow my mind is sometimes they’ll say, “Okay, someone’s asked me how to do something.” God bless him, Tom Morello. Our D&D friend. As good as he is at playing guitar is how bad he is at just managing simple computer tasks.

John: It is so much fun to watch Craig Mazin be like Tom Morello’s tech support.

Craig: He will just hand me his iPad like, “Help me.”

John: Like he’s a three-year-old who wants to watch more Cocomelon.

Craig: Daddy? If he has his laptop, I’ll say, “All right, let’s go to your Finder. What is that?” People don’t know where it is, or what it is. These kids.

John: I miss my mom, but so much of my time with my mom was just really fundamental tech support. Oh my God. It’s like, “Ben was over, and he ruined my computer,” and I was like, “He literally moved a window one inch on your computer. That’s what he did.”

Craig: He ruined it.

John: He ruined it.

Craig: My wife will occasionally use the phrase, it’s broken. “My iPad’s broken.” It’s not broken. “Is it in pieces?” “Well, no, but it’s not doing what it’s supposed to.” She listens to this podcast, by the way. I’m going to hear about this.

John: Oh, yes.

Craig: I don’t care.

John: How dare you put her on a podcast?

Craig: You know what? I say a lot of nice things about her.

John: You do. You do say plenty of nice things.

Craig: I really do. I really say a lot of nice things about it.

John: Some of it is even recorded.

Craig: This isn’t even that bad.

John: No.

Craig: No. What is that? It’s broken. You mean it’s not working the way you want it to, or you don’t know how to use it? You’re broken.

John: Here’s the thing I’m trying to do, and I cannot get this to do it.

Craig: That’s a you’re broken thing. We need to fix you. The iPad is fine. Oh, she’s going to be so mad.

John: Let’s talk about television, then, instead of this issue.

Craig: Save my marriage.

[laughter]

John: This came up during a staff meeting, and Nima, who does our coding, said, “Is TV better now or is it just much worse?” Nima is fairly pessimistic. He thought it’s much, much worse. I wanted to talk through the ways that TV is better and worse now for both the viewer and for the person making television. Let’s start with the good news.

Craig: We’re comparing it to–

John: To 10 years ago. Let’s not do that. You have to pick a thing. Let’s say over the last 10 years.

Craig: 2015 to 2025.

John: Here are some things that I think is probably better as a viewer over the last 10 years. It’s much more global. The television we watched used to just be American television. Now we watch television from all over the world, including stuff with subtitles, things we would never be exposed to before. That’s great. That’s thanks to streaming. Cinematically, the way our shows look is much better than it was 10 years ago. Our standards for it, what we’re supposed to see, things just do look better. We’re spending more money on making things look great and sound great. I think we’re really focusing on the cinematic qualities of things.

This is halfway between for the viewer and for the creator. Prestige. I think we’re acknowledging that great TV is our greatest art form at this moment. While movies are still great, I think TV is really taking the dominance there. Over the last 10 years, I think there’s much better diversity and representation. We see more different kinds of people on screens than we did 10 years ago. We’re hearing more of their stories, and more of their stories are being told by the people who actually live those experiences rather than being beamed in by ordinary white guys.

This is going to be a pro and a con. We focused on quality over quantity. We’re doing fewer episodes of shows. Any individual episode of a series is probably better now than an individual episode of a series was 10 years ago, partly because there’s fewer of them. I see nods there. Anything more you’d say as a viewer experience that the things are better than 10 years ago?

Craig: They’re definitely better. That’s not to disparage the great, great shows that-

John: One hundred percent.

Craig: -were 10 years ago, amazing shows, but 10 years ago, we didn’t really even have the ability to do what we now consider to be the limited format. It was almost not a thing at all.

John: We had the mini-series, but–

Craig: Mini-series were typically– Well, the classic network mini-series was adapting a very popular novel. There were some prestigious ones like Roots or Shogun back in the ’80s, but mostly it was Sinatra by Kitty Kelley, The Life and Times of Sinatra. Over three nights, we’re going to explore Elvis. The rise of the 12-episode, 5-episode, just limited series in general. If you look at what limited series were prior to 2015, with rare exception, shows like Band of Brothers and so forth, it just wasn’t what it– Now, there are four, five, six great limited series every year, minimum.

John: Even more so than limited series, I would say that HBO always had the quality mark on what HBO was trying to do. I remember I went to an event with David Chase a couple of months back. I realized the Sopranos had many more episodes than he thought it did. I always thought it was like an eight-episode season, but no, no. It was a full season of a show, 12 or 15.

Craig: Something like that.

John: It was a sizable number. HBO set a very high standard, and people started reaching out for that standard, and that transformed things. You have to say, the arrival of Netflix, House of Cards, which was also aiming for that high standard, just set the bar.

Craig: Netflix is the good and bad news, I think, because Netflix opened up a fire hydrant and out came 4 million shows. That is the major difference between, I think, 10 years ago and now. Even though there’s been some contraction, still insane amount of television they make. I think that they make the same number of really good shows every year. That hasn’t changed. There’s a lot of quantity there. Their signal-to-noise ratio is not great, but that’s okay. That’s part of their deal. Whereas someplace like FX, for instance, still has an excellent signal-to-noise ratio.

Amazon’s been a really interesting one. Amazon, it’s not quite at Netflix level of volume. It’s not at HBO level of curation. They have made some huge bets on things, spent a lot of money. Some of them have worked out, some haven’t. What they do is they certainly support people. When they believe in something, boy, do they support it financially. Then there’s Apple. Apple’s the interesting one to watch. They had a very good year at the Emmys.

John: For sure.

Craig: The studio won everything.

John: Severance got tremendous attention as well.

Craig: Severance, it went from that show that a few people had seen and loved in Season 1 to much more of a cultural thing in Season 2. Apple was running shows, and they still run shows that I’m not sure anyone watches.

John: Expensive shows that it seems like nobody watches.

Craig: Right. That makes them an interesting patron of the arts.

John: My friend James loves the Apple show Acapulco, which I’ve watched an episode of. I was like, “I totally get it.”

Craig: There’s a show called Acapulco?

John: That just finished its fourth season.

Craig: No.

John: It is-

Craig: Are you serious?

John: It is a-

Craig: How do they– This is what Apple advertised.

John: It is a candy-colored, just delightful romp. I feel like nobody’s watched it, but it goes for four seasons.

Craig: Oh my God, this is incredible.

John: The lead actor’s incredible. Everyone in it’s really great.

Craig: I don’t want them to feel like– Apple does not advertise things. It’s not their fault or my fault that I didn’t know about this.

John: This ties into, let’s talk about, as a viewer, the things that are worse now than 10 years ago. There’s no shared cultural moments. There’s everyone–

Craig: They are coming back around.

John: Occasionally, there are some, but there are very few. I feel like the end of Summer I Turned Pretty, that was– The wrap-up of that felt like a shared cultural moment. The end of Severance, I felt like a shared cultural moment. A bunch of people were focusing on that thing, but the fact that you don’t even know that Acapulco is a show that ran for four years, 10 years ago, would be less likely.

Craig: Yes, because there are just so many fewer shows. Also, Apple is very specifically interesting to me in the way that they almost are like, “We don’t even want you to know we’re running the show.” Like See. See is a big show and we’re in it for a while. They’re just like, “Let’s not tell anyone.”

John: We have billboards here close to our house for Chief of War, but I don’t see anything beyond that in terms of the cultural conversation.

Craig: It’s a very interesting choice they make. I can’t quite make sense of it. I’m sure that Tim Apple right now is fuming and about to turn my iPhone off. The reason I point it out is just because I feel for the people that make television.

John: 100%.

Craig: I helped out on Mythic Quest for a bit, and I always felt like they were just so underserved by the marketing machine because I thought the show was wonderful. They make a lot of great stuff. Now, Amazon advertises the hell out of their things. They certainly are doing that part right. Netflix is their own advertising agency. The scary thing about Netflix is because they are subscribed to by everyone-

John: They just put some on the homescreen.

Craig: -whatever is on the home screen is advertising.

John: We’ve already talked about this, but ways the TV is worse now, the content glut. There’s just so much that it’s impossible to sift through it all.

Craig: There is so much.

John: You can never watch all the things you wanted to watch. Instead of 30 shows with 22 episodes a piece, we have 100 shows with eight-episode seasons.

Craig: If you just look at the amount of episodes-

John: The amount of episodes is–

Craig: Look, I think it’s better. For instance, Adolescence. That show is just simply– You don’t even hear about it 10 years ago. It’s not made. It is made. It just stays over there. Nobody watches it here. “Don’t understand their accents,” and now, we have so many wonderful things. Nima’s complaint is the complaint of somebody who’s getting old. That’s what’s happening there.

John: I think so.

Craig: You start to have nostalgic feelings when you hit your 30s, where you’re like, “It’s not as good as it was.” No, it’s just that you’re not living– Life is not this magical, glowing smorgasbord of 20-something-ness. That’s over.

John: Nima had two points here that I do want to try to articulate the way he said. He talked about a lack of curation and that HBO used to be the guarantee of quality. That was the seal. I would add to it that pilots were a really important filtering mechanism. The pilot process determined what shows actually made it to air. Now, because I think we’re going straight to series a lot more often, there’s a lot more series that probably shouldn’t have been made, or at least shouldn’t have been made the way that they were made, that are just happening. That curation aspect has changed.

Craig: Yes. I think HBO still curates the hell out of it because they really just have– They still act like a linear network even though they are more and more, of course, entirely a streaming entity. There’s one drama a week, one episode a week, and that means there’s five shows for the year. That’s it. They still curate pretty heavily, and that’s reflected in how things perform. FX, I think, curates pretty heavily. I can’t make sense of how the rest of them actually function. Either they’re all making a lot of money or they’re all losing a lot of money. Right?

John: Yes.

Craig: We’ll never know.

John: We’ll never find out, which is nuts. Nima’s final point was that shows are prioritizing what happens in the episode over what happens in the series. Nima’s point was that you used to talk about a show, it’s like, “Oh my, I love Buffy the Vampire Slayer.” You talk about, “I love the series as a whole,” but you weren’t so focused on what happened in this episode or that episode. Now with shorter seasons, all the emphasis is on that was one great episode or this was a mess of an episode. It happens in these short seasons, too, where it’s like, “Ugh, that was a clunker in the middle of that.”

Craig: Really, what he’s saying is if there’s eight episodes, six of them are great, one is fine, and one’s a clunker, that clunker is going to really stick out.

John: It does stand out.

Craig: When you do 22 episodes–

John: They were always clunker episodes.

Craig: Most of them were clunker episodes. They were disposable and didn’t matter. They were running ads throughout the middle of them.

John: Your enjoyment of the series was the enjoyment of the series and not the one hour of watching one show.

Craig: Sure. It’s just a different experience.

John: That is the difference.

Craig: It’s just different. What would you rather have? Would you rather watch Battlestar Galactica, 1982– Was that what it was?

John: Yes.

Craig: Or would you rather watch Andor now?

John: I’ll take Andor.

Craig: Andor. No offense to the original Battlestar Galactica, but how can you make– You can’t make 22 great episodes. That’s not a thing. It does become about the season. I think that that is what Nima is experiencing. He’s growing up. He’s going through early grouchy days. Soon, he will develop into full grouchiness. Then he’ll come back around to cool.

John: Because she’s listening to this show, I do want to single out Aline and Rachel as well for Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, which feels like it has the quality of a short season show, but they were shooting like 15 or so many episodes.

They were shooting a weekly series of the show, which is just crazy. I look at all these other streaming shows that only have to do eight episodes over the course of whatever, a show made for Apple or anything else. Yes, the production values can be higher, but what they’re actually achieving episode by episode, incredible.

Craig: Listen, I would love to work on a show, but it’s 15 episodes and all takes place at Tony’s house, and the bada-bing, oh my God, and the back room, and then it’s occasional.

John: Lets you know what sets you have? Craig, you would love to have sets, standing sets. It’s such a dream. Craig is crying now. He’s realizing what he’s done.

Craig: Just like every single time I write something, I’m like, “Then for what? For what?”

John: We’re going to shoot it for one day-

Craig: I’m just going to throw it out. We do.

John: We do.

Craig: That’s what we do.

John: Let’s talk about how, from a writing perspective, as a person who writes or creates shows or writes on shows, TV is better now than it was 10 years ago. Let’s compare 2025 to 2015. I would say short seasons are more survivable in terms of you have some time off, you have a little bit of a life. When I talk to people who work on the classic network shows, they would have a summer, sort of, but there was always-

Craig: A hiatus.

John: Yes, a hiatus. They were always just writing the same damn show. It was exhausting. We were doing a rewatch of a show that I really enjoy, a comedy, and I was talking to a friend about it. He’s like, “Oh, you know how awful that was behind the scenes?” No, I don’t want to know. Everyone was sleeping in their offices, and it was awful.

Craig: That’s not good.

John: That’s not good. I think there’s a little more survivability now, but we’re going to talk about the downside of that with short seasons.

Craig: I’m not sure. I don’t feel so survivable.

John: Streamers, I think, take wilder chances than networks ever did.

Craig: Oh, yes.

John: Which is great. You can play to a niche audience and be a hit.

Craig: Oh my God. The things that people do. That’s the big difference, really, and that’s why television– Feature films used to take big swings and then got so conservative that all they would make is a superhero movie. Now we’re dancing around and thrilled that they made a cool-ass vampire movie. We used to make vampire movies, even period piece. The original Dracula was a period piece. We’re like, “Look how– W’re doing it again.” No, that’s what movies should have been the whole time. Television used to be the same thing. Every episode of TV was about a cop-

John: Doctor.

Craig: Or a doctor. Now, my God.

John: Now you can make a show like Overcompensating and get a second season of Overcompensating, which is a show I freaking love, but it’s a niche audience, and love it.

Craig: Totally.

John: Now versus 10 years ago, you can spend more time per script. The machinery of production, the television is a beast that eats scripts. You have more time to work on things and sometimes write a whole season before you start shooting, which has pros and cons.

Craig: That sounds great. I wonder what that’s like.

John: Then you can plan things. You can have setups and payoffs that you actually know are going to work because you planned. I actually think everything was always written. Downsides to that, too, but some pros. I would say a pro is that we now develop things year-round. There used to be one season, you developed all the shows. If you didn’t have a show that was going, you’re screwed. You have to wait until the next season.

Craig: There is no television season. There’s no hiring season. The way the industry functions vis-à-vis writers, that’s a whole other deal. Just for the audience, I think if you put aside your nostalgic yearning and you discount the signal-to-noise and just look at what is the actual quantity of signal, it’s tremendous.

John: Just wrapping this up, ways the TV is worse now as a creator or a staff writer, the short season doesn’t mean you’re always looking for a job. If you’re a staff writer on a show that is a room that’s running for 15, 20 weeks, halfway through that time, you need to start looking for other jobs. That sucks.

Craig: In terms of creators, a lot is worse about this method, so much.

John: We’ve talked on a podcast a lot about how when you divide the writing process from the production process, it’s those creators who end up getting dragged through three years of a show and getting paid for one. It can be exhausting.

Craig: The way it’s disrupted the career. It’s just disrupted the career.

John: Absolutely.

Craig: It’s turned it into this strange–

John: So many writers are completely divorced from the production process and have no ability to basically run a show.

Craig: Which is– Poor feature writers have been dealing with that forever. Like, this is the way it goes. You’re constantly looking for that next job. There is no guarantee. There is no schedule. There is no machinery to support anything. There’s no promotion ladder. There’s nothing. That’s what it’s now become for everyone. In terms of the audience and how they experience TV, I think the part that’s worse is the recap industry.

John: Totally.

Craig: I think the recap industry is a little bit like sports betting. Sports betting diminishes your pure enjoyment of a sporting event. The recap industry turns, particularly the big shows into– It’s almost like it tabloidizes them and again, feeds into outrage and so forth. There’s just so much clickbait on so much of it. I don’t know. I understand why it’s out there. It’s free publicity.

John: Pamela Ribon, who’s been on the show a couple of times, talking about she came up as a TV recapper. She’d watch a show and have to recap it in real time. There was an aspect to it that was actually, it was a kind of celebration in a fandom that was so intoxicating. A chance for people to participate and enjoy the thing they just watched.

Craig: Yes, but also, who are recaps for? They’re for people that didn’t watch it. I feel like we’ve just cliffnoted things so that people can– We used to say, okay, the water cooler, come in on Monday. Hate or love, you get to come in on Monday and talk about it with your friends at work, and hate on it or love on it. Now, you can be like, “I don’t want to watch this again. There’s too much stuff to watch, or I’m going to do something else. I’m just going to read the recap, and then I’ll be like, “Oh, yes. So I heard.”

John: Let’s wrap up this segment on TV, better, worse, or mixed now, 10 years?

Craig: Better.

John: I think mostly better. I think the quality of things you can watch as a viewer are better. I think, from a viewing perspective, I’m probably happier watching TV now than I was 10 years ago. From a person working in television, is it better or worse? I think it’s mixed and probably a little worse. At the bottom of the ladder, I think there’s smaller rooms, meaning fewer jobs, meaning less opportunity to actually see how stuff is working.

Craig: I have nothing to compare it to. My television career has taken place within the last 10 years.

John: My television career started in 1873.

Craig: Do you know I was [crosstalk].

John: 2000, that was when I was doing my disastrous WB show. I would say that if I had no business running a show that was supposed to be a weekly show. That’s completely out of my depth.

Craig: Running a show is hard.

John: It’s really hard. It’s really also hard for a person who’s never been in a TV room.

Craig: Yes, or a room. Running a television show is hard.

John: It’s hard.

Craig: It’s really hard. I like that they have that show runner’s training program. I’m just not sure how you train somebody for this. I get what you can impart, but it’s a little bit like combat training.

John: It is.

Craig: You join the Marines, they teach you how to shoot, they teach you how to move, and then– [screams] Once those bullets are going by, I’m like, “Training?”

John: No plan survives contact with the enemy.

Craig: No. Training is experience, survival.

John: Let’s answer a question or two. I see one here from CW.

Craig: CW.

John: CW.

Craig: Nice.

Drew: CW writes, “I usually am hired for feature projects for screenplays during the development phase, as is the case for most of us, but a new project coming up has a director wanting me to accompany him during table reads with cast and also during principal photography. He states that as the writer, I’m more in sync with the story, and he’ll need my help to chime in during those pre-production and production moments. In my country, the writer is almost never asked or allowed to be on set or reads. We are paid for the written work and cycled out once that is done.

“My question is, how do you rate for these tasks? Have you done this before on your commissioned works, and do you charge with a day rate? While others have opined that it’s a nice perk to be even invited along to do so, as writers generally are not asked to contribute during those phases, I also am aware that these tasks do take time and effort, and since they’re related to story, do they not count as labor as well and therefore to be rated?”

John: It is labor. You’re there not as a friend, but you’re there to be doing work, to be helping out. This is not under the writer’s guild; this is someplace overseas. I think your best place to start is looking for anybody who’s done similar work and seeing if there’s any comp that makes sense for you. Look at what other people are being paid on the production, look in the crew, and make sure you’re charging something that feels like it’s worth your time because ultimately, you are the person who’s going to know whether this is worth your time or not worth your time.

Craig: In the US, when it is writer’s guild, there’s something called an all-services deal, and that’s what we would apply to this. You get paid an amount of money that would cover the time that you’re working on it, and we protect our minimums by basically looking at the weekly minimum, multiplying it by the amount of time, and that’s the floor for whatever you’re– The nice thing about the all-services deal is you don’t have to bill every week. They don’t have to constantly decide if you’re going to be employed or not. They have bought your time, and then everyone can relax. You can relax and you are free then to write as much or as little as you want or need.

There isn’t this constant– You know, like when you have– I don’t know. You’ve hired somebody to paint your house, and they’re like, “Those shingles are going to be more today and then, oh, I’m going to come back.” Just here, do it. Paint the house and stop asking me. It’s the nickel and dimming that just drives everybody crazy. There is some amount that is reasonable here.

I don’t know what country CW is from, but my guess is he or she has an attorney that negotiated their deal in the first place. That’s the person I would be talking to, and that’s the kind of deal that you’d want to make, especially because you are valuable to the director. It’s not going to be a lot of money, but I would also say that the experience is tremendously important, and as I’ve said many times, you do work well with this director. A director-writer combo is incredibly powerful.

John: Yes, it is.

Craig: That rising tide will lift your boat financially when it’s time for the next one if this movie were successful.

John: CW is saying that in their country, it’s not common for the writer to be around in all parts of the process.

Craig: Same here.

John: Normalize it. Just be the person who’s there. I will say that the movies where I have been more involved have turned out better, and I also think-

Craig: What?

John: I think actors feel excited that you’re there and are an additional person who can help them out. It’s been nice and so on. Go, I was obviously there for every frame shot, but on the Tim Burton movies, where I was in there through pre-production and getting people started, it’s just nice. It really helps things get figured out and solve some problems before they become problems. Set the example, and it sounds like you’re going to– Should have a good experience.

Craig: The director basically told you why it’s a good idea.

John: Yes, do it.

Drew: Dan writes, “I plan to turn my screenplay into an audio drama for Audible, complete with score, sound effects, and professional voice actors. Do you think this has the same merit as making a low-budget feature? I work in podcasting and know I can make the audio drama extremely high quality, and I want to follow the advice of trying to make something myself with friends and not wait around to break in. I have no aspirations toward directing and don’t want to take the time to raise funds for a film feature, especially considering the audio drama can be made right away.”

John: Does it have the same prestige as a film? No. It’s going to get a tiny fraction of the audience for many films. If you know how to do this and you actually really want to do this, you should absolutely do it. If you’re not doing this because you don’t know what else to do, but you’re doing it because you actually really want to do it, that you would listen to this thing yourself, great. I always caution people like, “Don’t do the thing that you yourself would not watch or listen to. You’re wasting your time.”

Craig: This person said they don’t want to direct?

Drew: They don’t want to direct, but they wrote it as a screenplay.

Craig: Who’s going to be directing these voice actors?

John: I feel like Dan maybe feels comfortable doing that, but doesn’t feel comfortable doing the onset blocking and all the other stuff.

Craig: Generally, no. Nobody listens to that. As long as you’re fine with that. It could be that one that people love, but–

John: I hope it is.

Craig: The value for me, first of all, would not spend a lot of money on it. The value would be to make me a better writer. I’ve made this. I’ve listened to it. I’ve experienced it. I’ve edited. That will make you a better writer.

John: I’ll also caution Dan, and Dan, I’m sure you’re aware of this, but audio drama is really hard. It’s a weird format because it’s like, what is this scene? Where are we? All the things you get for free in a visual medium are challenging to do in audio. Just make sure you’re-

Craig: Why have you invited me to this greasy spoon diner?

John: Make sure you’re really thinking through how you’re going to do it and you’re listening for great examples of how other people are doing it.

Craig: And how to not do it.

John: Avoid the bad things.

Craig: Avoid the things that are bad.

John: It is time for one cool thing. Craig, you got a spoiler because I already showed you my one cool thing, which is called Phantom Inc.

Craig: You got me to buy it before we even began recording.

John: Phantom Inc. is a game that we played here in the office last week. It is in the same space as Codenames or Decrypto, where you are in two different teams and you’re trying to get people on your team to guess this thing. There’s one clue-giver, and everyone else is trying to figure out what this is. The mechanic is really, really smart. The narrative idea is that there is a spirit who is trying to describe one object. The two different teams are both trying to describe the same object, but you’re writing one letter at a time. There’s questions that the team can ask. It plays really well. It’s so smart. Phantom Inc. is available everywhere, but we’ll put a link in the show notes to it.

Craig: Love it. You’ve got a game, I’ve got a game. This week, the game, The House of Tesla. This is not referring to anything involving Elon Musk.

John: You know what? I’ve got to say, though, it’s-

Craig: It’s triggering.

John: Yes, it’s triggering.

Craig: It’s triggering. The House of Tesla referring to the scientist, not the overpriced company.

John: This looks like a very classic Craig game.

Craig: It’s a very classic Craig game. It was released on Steam and is not yet out for iOS or Android, but eventually it will be. It’s by a company called Blue Brain Games. They made the House of Da Vinci games. The House of Da Vinci games themselves were barely derivative of the Room games by Fireproof Software. Is this what I would call an A-plus example of the genre? No, but is it well done? Mostly yes.

John: Great.

Craig: I think the visuals are great. The puzzles are very typical for this sort of thing, and the manipulation of objects is fun to do. I’m going to give them a little bit of a ding on the acting.

John: It’s just voice acting, or they’re performing, too?

Craig: They just needed to cast one good voice actor to play Tesla. The way he reads things, I’m fairly certain it’s a man and not AI, but it’s on the edge. It’s so weirdly dead. I don’t know. I’d be curious to see what the deal is there, but it’s not the actor’s fault if it is a human being. It’s theirs, it’s directing matters. Let’s face it, no one’s buying this game for the great voice acting. They’re there for the puzzles and the environment, and there’s some interesting mechanics in it. I think so far, so good on Steam. It’s delivering exactly what I expected it to. The House of Tesla by Blue Brain Games. Sorry for triggering you, John.

John: I love it. That is our show for this week. Scriptnotes has been produced by Drew Marquardt.

Craig: Oh no.

John: Welcome back, Drew. Edited by Matthew Chilelli, outro this week is by Nick Moore. If you have an outro, you can send us a link to ask@johnaugust.com. That is also the place where you can send questions like the ones we answered today. You’ll find transcripts at johnaugust.com along with the signup for our weekly newsletter called Interesting, which has lots of links to things about writing. You’ll find clips and other helpful video on our YouTube. Just search for Scriptnotes and give us a follow. You can also find us on Instagram at Scriptnotes Podcast.

We have T-shirts and hoodies, and drinkwear perfect for the holiday season. You’ll find those at Cotton Bureau. Make sure to get your Scriptnotes shirt before Austin Film Festival so we can identify, like, “Oh, you’re a Scriptnotes listener.” You’ll find show notes with links to all the–

Craig: Oh no, Roney. Scriptnotes listeners. [laughs]

John: You’ll find show notes with links to all the things we talked about today in the email you get each week as a premium subscriber. Again, thank you to all our premium subscribers. You guys are the best. Thank you to everyone who pre-ordered the book as well. That’s fantastic.

Craig: Put us to work this morning.

John: Absolutely.

Craig: Got to sign my name many times.

John: Pretty good stuff. If you want more information about the book, Scriptnotesbook.com is a place that has links out to all the different places where you can pre-order. We’ll probably also put on, if you want one of these special signed ones, to Premiere Collectibles, but we can also put a link on there for that. You can sign up to become a premium member at scriptnotes.net, where you get all the back episodes and bonus segments like the one we’re about to record on coffee. Craig, Drew, thanks for a fun episode.

Craig: Thanks, John.

John: Thanks, guys.

[Bonus Segment]

John: Craig, before we started signing all these bookplates, we got you a cup of coffee, which is from our Keurig. How would you rate that coffee?

Craig: It’s not my favorite cup of coffee. Keurig, they’re like the Blue Brain Games of– It’s what I expected to get.

John: It’s drinkable, but not your [unintelligible 00:43:41].

Craig: It’s drinkable. I’m a black coffee drinker, so I’m comparing apples to apples. Nothing can’t say, oh, this blends so lovely with the oat foam. I’m just–

John: When did you start drinking coffee?

Craig: I know exactly when I started drinking coffee. This is a weird story, actually. I think I’ve talked about this before. When I was in high school and I knew I wanted to be a doctor, and I knew I was going to be pre-med in college, I did a summer internship between my junior and senior year with the Monmouth County Medical Examiner’s Office. Every day, I would go to the morgue at the hospital and assist with autopsies. It was early. I was 16. They let a 16-year-old assist with autopsies. It was a different time, but it was really early. It started early.

I was a teenager, and I’m not waking up early. Plus, it was the summer, so I was hanging out with my friends. When the alarm would go off at 7:00, I was like, “Oh my God.” I would get to the hospital and I was really bleary. There’s the first body already. It’s like, “I’ve got to cut open another body.” They had a coffee– It was morgue coffee. It is a Mr. Coffee, that marble glass pot.

John: That has never been cleaned.

Craig: Ever. They had styrofoam cups, those old, nasty styrofoam cups. They didn’t even have milk or sugar or anything because they were like, “Whatever, we do autopsies. No one’s got time for that.” I drank this horrible coffee out of a horrible styrofoam cup in a room with dead people. That, my friend, is how you grow some hair on your chest.

[laughter]

Craig: It was terrible, and it woke me up. That’s how I started each day.

John: Caffeine.

Craig: Then I would turn and go, “What do we got, boys?” “Crush injury.” “All right, here we go.” I was also smoking in the room. No, I wasn’t. I don’t know if it’d be great, but it’s like Quincy. You don’t know what Quincy is.

John: I don’t know Quincy at all.

Craig: You remember Quincy.

John: Quincy medical examiner, yes.

Craig: Quincy, Jack Klugman played a medical examiner in the-

John: Several times.

Craig: -’70s, and he was awesome.

John: My first coffee was in college at some point, so never in high school. I don’t think I ever had coffee. My mom always had coffee, and I tasted it, but I never willingly drank coffee. My friend George and I had driven from Des Moines to Chicago because we wanted to see Naked Lunch, which was only screening in Chicago. It was so effing cold, and George was like, “Let’s get coffee.” I’m like, “Sure.” There was a Starbucks. First time I’d ever seen a Starbucks.

Craig: No.

John: In Starbucks, I got something and probably a lot of milk in it.

Craig: Give me something.

John: Maybe I asked for a latte or a cappuccino or whatever it was, but that was my first time having coffee. It was good, but it didn’t enamor me to coffee. It wasn’t until I moved out to Los Angeles post-college that I started drinking coffee a little bit more regularly. At some point, I got a coffee maker and just started drinking coffee in the mornings, but that was the turning point.

Craig: You find your way to it. It’s just like nice cocaine. I’ve never used cocaine, but I feel like coffee’s like nice cocaine. Like cigarettes, I feel like more.

John: You’re not drinking coffee right now, but you grew up drinking it.

Craig: Yes.

John: When did you start coffee?

Craig: As a little child, like a two-year-old?

Drew: I think I was probably like seven or eight. Just sitting there with like a hot cup of coffee. Tennis lessons in the summer, I would get a blueberry bagel and a little coffee with a lot of cream and sugar.

Craig: Oh, so you had milk-

Drew: I had milk.

Craig: -with some coffee. You had coffee ice cream.

Drew: Basically. I do think iced coffee was probably the gateway for a lot of my generation.

John: I’m sure for the next generation because iced coffee was not a thing in our years.

Craig: Honestly, I say this as this grouchy black coffee drinker so much, and I’m like, “That’s not coffee. That’s something else. That’s coffee-flavored milk. That’s coffee-flavored something else.” What I do, actually, my standard order is not just pure, pure black, actually. Standard order is short Americano. What does that mean? Tiny, small? Why don’t they just call it small? Small americano, two or three shots, and one pump of mocha.

It’s not a lot. Just a tiny bit of sweetness and a little bit of chocolate to mellow out what can be sometimes a little bit of a bitter awakening. Most of that mocha never makes it into the coffee, by the way. It goes in and just drops to the bottom, so when I’m done, there’s a sludge at the bottom that I never touch. It’s just that little hint, but that’s every morning. Starbucks. I wish I didn’t like it so much, but I do.

John: We grew up at a time before Starbucks and before Peet’s. Before there was nice coffee or consistent coffee.

Craig: Just diner coffee.

John: Yes. Diner coffee is generally just awful.

Craig: Horrible.

John: We’ll go to IHOP, and IHOP has just notoriously the worst coffee.

Craig: Terrible.

John: It seems like it’ll be so simple to get good coffee.

Craig: It’s terrible. Also, if you get a cup of coffee there, I’ll deal with it. Fine. I’m halfway through it. Let’s say you are somebody that drinks coffee with milk. You’re halfway through it. They come by, and they’re like, “Let me freshen that up.” They fill the rest of it, and looking like, “Now I don’t know what this coffee is anymore. There’s no sensible portion to this.” It’s insane.

John: The math formula is for adding two liquids together.

Craig: It’s madness.

John: It’s madness.

Craig: It’s absolute madness. Then there’s that blue coffee cup in New York, the green-style coffee cup, that coffee is horrible. I do remember Mr. Coffee.

John: Oh, yes.

Craig: My parents had a Mr. Coffee, which Joe DiMaggio advertised.

John: That’s the glass carafe and plastic thing on top, and you put the paper filter in and load it in. The challenge with Mr. Coffee was, you can make a decent cup of coffee with Mr. Coffee, but you’re making three cups of coffee. If you only want one, you’re making too much. I had a little Mr. Coffee, but the math just doesn’t work right. It didn’t work right for making one.

Craig: When I wasn’t doing autopsies, I was working at a Wawa, which is our New Jersey, Pennsylvania-area convenience store chain. One of the things I had to do was, every seven hours, change the coffee out because we have those coffee pots. By the time you get to the end of that shift, it is just hot dirt.

John: Yes, hot dirt.

Craig: When people pour it, they would spill it, and it would sizzle and burn on the plate below it and stank.

John: Gross. Did those coffee pots ever get washed out?

Craig: [laughs] I’ve heard from a flight attendant that coffee pots on an airplane never get cleaned.

John: I’m not sure why you do need to wash them out. What’s in there?

Craig: I guess not. It’s just hot liquid, and then you’re going to rinse it out with more hot liquid to put the same hot liquid back in. If there were anything that could spoil inside of it, but coffee is just bean-flavored water. There’s definitely not a lot.

John: Until someone’s drunk from it or if there’s milk in there, that could do a thing.

Craig: You never put milk in the coffee pot.

John: No, not in the coffee pot.

Craig: Actually, it’s like a self-cleaning thing, like a dog’s mouth. It turns out that’s an urban myth, by the way. You explored that.

John: Urban myth. Filthy, filthy mouth.

Craig: They’re disgusting.

John: My current coffee situation is I do Aeropress coffee. Aeropress is you do one cup at a time. It’s a little bit of a hassle, but it’s pretty simple, and it’s very consistent. I’m weighing my 16 ounces of coffee on the scale, and it’s consistent. I know exactly what it’s going to taste like. I’m half-caf in the morning, and I’m just full-decaf after that. I can only have very little caffeine over the course of the day.

Craig: I cut myself off caffeine-wise, but I think 2:00 PM is my absolute limit. I thought about investing in– Really, what I drink is espresso. I’ll get an Americano just because the thing about espresso is it’s like, boom, gone, done, which I’ll do. Even Americanos made with espresso, I thought about investing in a really nice machine. The problem is it’s not as good as what they got at any coffee spot.

John: We had a JURA, which is the one where it grinds and it does it all itself. It’s okay, but it’s not great. Honestly, Aeropress is much better than that is.

Craig: I will say that in my– not the place we live in now, but our prior home had that Miele coffee thing built in, and that thing was incredible because it would really make complicated stuff. It was pretty cool.

John: Circling back the conversation around to the Keurig that we had, we call that machine Little Stew. Little Stew is good for just making that cup of coffee at a time. I will find that if we have people over for a game night or we’re eating desserts, it’s like, “Who wants coffee?” That’s much more handy than me trying to make individual things. We don’t have a Mr. Coffee anymore. We’re making coffee in that.

Craig: It’s a perfectly good way to go about it. Keurig, notoriously horrible for the environment.

John: Little plastic pots.

Craig: Yes. I’ve never had a cup of coffee from a Keurig that made me go, “Wow, good.” It’s always been like, “I need this liquid to put caffeine chemical in my brain.”

John: Instant coffee has actually gotten noticeably better over the years. You wouldn’t think so, but there’s many cases where instant coffee is much better than IHOP coffee. The good instant coffee.

Craig: Sure. I have this sense memory of my parents dinging a spoon inside of a mug, ding, ding, ding, because they put those older’s crystals in there. No, Sanka is for the elderly because they can’t have caffeine. Also, Sanka isn’t even coffee. What is Sanka? What comprises Sanka? I don’t even know.

John: Don’t know.

Craig: Let’s find out.

John: What is Sanka?

Craig: I feel like it’s made of mica chips and bone dust.

John: While we’re looking that up, I’m going to pull up the ad for High Point Coffee, which is the perfect way to end this segment. Let me see if I can find the video here. What is Sanka?

Craig: It says it is coffee. It’s just decaffeinated, but I don’t know. I always thought it was made of some other stuff. Oh, this is interesting. The name Sanka is a portmanteau of sans and ca for caffeine.

John: Sans ca.

Craig: Sans ca.

John: That feels like something you could be using in a puzzle at some point.

Craig: Absolutely. Sanka is nasty.

John: Let’s end this segment with the incredible Lauren Bacall and an ad for High Point Coffee.

Craig: Oh, no, it’s Lauren Bacall, not Katherine Hepburn. Different.

Lauren Bacall: It’s very nice.

Speaker 1: Thank you.

Lauren: One rehearsal, four actors, and 20 coffee cups.

Craig: Oh, I’ve seen this. It’s great. It’s amazing.

Lauren: Around here, we don’t like coffee. We love it. I look forward to my sixth cup as much as my first one. That’s because my coffee’s High Point decaffeinated. I don’t need caffeine. I’m active enough, thank you. That’s just one reason this coffee lover chooses High Point. Oh, that aroma’s wonderful. Just look at this deep, rich color. You know what really matters to coffee lovers? This. Deep and rich. Flavor this good has to be deep-brewed into a coffee.

Speaker 2: Try High Point. The coffee lover’s decaffeinated.

Lauren: Deep-brewed flavor. I think you’ll really go for it.

Craig: Lauren Bacall is from some spot in the ocean between New York and London.

John: Which is fantastic.

Craig: Incredible.

John: I love the Mid-Atlantic accent.

Craig: We had left that so far behind by this point. She doesn’t care.

John: Doesn’t care. The Trans-Atlantic accent.

Craig: She’s like, “I love my–“ That commercial’s made for drag queens to re-perform.

John: That’s what it is.

Craig: I love a cup of coffee.

John: As do I.

Craig: It’s my sixth cup. I’m like, oh, Jesus. Slow down.” It doesn’t matter. She’s going to be peeing constantly. “Where’s Ms. Bacall?” “10-1.” “How many cups of High Point did you give her?” “12.”

[laughter]

John: She’s now mostly High Point.

Craig: Also, 12 cups of High Point at some point will equal 4 cups. They’re still caffeinated. She’s like, “I love my High Point and this line of cocaine.”

John: That’s so good. Drew Craig, thanks much.

Craig: Thank you.

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Scriptnotes, Episode 705: Short Films and Existential Threats, Transcript

October 15, 2025 Scriptnotes Transcript

The original post for this episode can be found here.

John August: Hey, this is John. We recorded this episode on Friday afternoon. In it, we talk about ABC’s decision to indefinitely suspend Jimmy Kimmel for his comments in the wake of the Charlie Kirk assassination. Then on Monday afternoon, ABC announced that Kimmel would be coming back to air on Tuesday. We decided to leave this segment as recorded because the broader implications are still the broader implications. I’ll be honest, the first half of the episode is a little grim because how could it not be?

Then in the second half, I promise we do get into short films and other evergreen topics. Enjoy.

[Music]

Hello and welcome. My name is John August.

Craig Mazin: My name is Craig Mazin.

John: You’re listening to Episode 705 of Scriptnotes. It’s a podcast about screenwriting and things that are interesting to screenwriters. Today on the show, what is the platonic ideal of the short film, and why should anyone make one? Then we’ll revisit our 2018 forecast of existential threats and update our predictions. Plus, we have listener questions.

Drew is off traveling the world this week. Luckily, we convinced Scriptnotes legend Megana Rao to fill in for him. Megana, welcome back.

Megana Rao: Thank you. I’m here again.

John: You never really left, but now you’re actually behind the control board rather than just at the desk.

Megana: Yes. I’m afraid I am revealing how desperate I am to hang.

Craig: I don’t think so.

John: Oh. No.

Megana: Okay, great.

Craig: No, I think what you’re doing is evoking and becoming the legend of Megana Rao. I like that you’re legendary now. In Dungeons & Dragons, things with legendary status, quite awesome.

Megana: Okay. I’ll take that.

John: Unique, special, highly sought after.

Megana: Very pretty,

John: You’re not an artifact.

Craig: Did you say pretty? [laughter] No. I’m not commenting on you. I’m saying–

Megana: No, classic in Dungeons & Dragons lore, legendary is gorgeous, stunning.

Craig: No. Although I like this idea now, what NPC would Megana Rao be? She’s definitely into being beautiful. I’m feeling possibly banshee. I always feel like they’re beautiful.

Megana: Do you?

Craig: Yes. In D&D, they float there. They’re like these ladies that float. Then they scream you to death.

Megana: Yes. That actually is accurate.

[laughter]

Craig: They scream you to death.

John: We will start our actual podcast here in a second.

Craig: Oh, sure.

John: In our bonus segment with premium members, Megana and I were talking, and I think we’re going to talk about intermissions, the role of intermissions in film and entertainment, and also stage management.

Craig: Oh, okay. I can think of my first film intermission. It’s burned in my brain.

Megana: Ooh, can’t wait to hear.

John: We are generally not a news-driven podcast, but this past week there were two bits of significant news that I did want to talk about. First, I want to talk about Robert Redford. Robert Redford passed away this week. Legendary, again.

Craig: Actual legend. Sorry, Megana. Actual legend.

Megana: No, I’ll give him that.

John: Actor and director. Of course, what I associate him most with is the Sundance Institute. He founded the Sundance Institute, named after Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. Sundance, we think about the film festival, and independent film, especially in the US, would not be what it is without the Sundance Film Festival showcasing and highlighting independent film.

Craig: Robert Redford was someone who used his pretty privilege before anyone knew what pretty privilege was to actually achieve something. He was an incredibly handsome man and incredibly charismatic, plus a really good actor, and let’s not forget also an excellent director, even though I still think Raging Bull should have won. In any case, he was a Renaissance man. He absolutely channeled all of his charisma and pretty privilege into getting people to show up on that mountain to see a film festival, and he didn’t have to do that.

It wasn’t there to make him rich. It wasn’t really there to make anybody rich. It was just there to promote art. I haven’t seen anybody similar do anything since. Not like that.

John: No. I got to meet Redford a couple of times over the years. Part of Sundance is also the Sundance Screenwriters and Directors Labs. The labs are a phenomenal experience. When Redford wasn’t off shooting a movie someplace, he would come visit us at the labs. He would sit at the edges of meetings and contribute where he could. He was mostly listening and was always just so smart about trying to find who the next visionary filmmakers were going to be and how to support them in making their first and their second films.

So many of the guests we’ve had on the show came through the Sundance Filmmaker Labs.

Craig: Yes. He was a force for good. He actually achieved things. In our town, and I don’t know if you’ve noticed this, John, we are gushing with unproductive opinions. I was just at the Emmys getting my ass kicked. A lot of unproductive opinions [laughter] said there on stage, not going to move the needle. Not going to do a damn thing. People do like to talk in Hollywood, but Robert Redford did stuff. Hats off to him, and rest in peace.

John: Absolutely. The other bit of news was Jimmy Kimmel. As we’re recording this on Friday afternoon, the Kimmel’s late show is off the air, Late Night with Jimmy Kimmel. For international listeners who may not understand how late shows work in the United States, there are three big networks that each of them has a late show. Jimmy Kimmel hosts the show on ABC. He’s been doing that for more than 15 years.

Craig: Forever, as I can tell.

John: He was taken off the air extensively for comments made about the assassination of Charlie Kirk. If you actually look at the actual text of what he said, it was not inflammatory in any meaningful way.

Craig: It inflamed people. I don’t know if that qualifies as inflammatory. What we’re dealing with is the vestigial nature of broadcast television. Most of what we think about as television, we watch Netflix or Max, or even Disney+, and it’s streaming. Networks are still broadcast over the air. I actually looked this up. There’s still something like 18% of Americans who get their television through an antenna. Weirdly, there has been an increase in antenna use among millennials. Megana, explain.

Megana: Who? Where would I even find that?

John: My guess would be it’s folks who are getting their internet through some other way. They’re on some shared Wi-Fi network, and they want to watch TV occasionally.

Craig: They just don’t want to pay anything. It’s free. The hiccup here is that because it’s over the public airways, it is regulated by the FCC. The FCC, which we think of as an administrative body, which technically is nothing more than that, a regulatory agency, the appointees are political appointees. The FCC has been a football for a long time. People can call in and complain to the FCC, and the FCC can decide what complaints matter more than others. In this case, Disney had a couple of things going on. They had an affiliate uprising.
There’s a couple of companies that own a lot of stations that are affiliated with the ABC network. They also had the FCC getting cranky.

John: We should say those affiliates are attempting to merge, and they need supplemental approval to merge.

Craig: The affiliates are attempting to merge, which they are going to be allowed to do by this administration. ABC decided– it’s similar to what they did when Florida had their Don’t Say Gay thing. Disney just keeps stepping in it. I get it. On the one hand, they’re like the family brand, and they need to stand up. On the other hand, now everybody just hates them here in the business. If I’m Jimmy Kimmel, and I don’t know Jimmy– I talk to him once every year when I’m a celebrity phone-a-friend on, let’s be a millionaire, two or three.

What do you do if you’re him? Do you come back? Do you say, “Okay, yes.” In my mind, they’re like, “They’re going to suspend him for a week, and he’ll be back next week.” I don’t know.

John: We don’t really know. Again, we’re recording this on Friday afternoon. By the time you hear this on Monday afternoon or Tuesday morning, things could be vastly different. It’s moving so quickly that Megana and I went to the protest at ABC yesterday, which was organized at noon, and sort of last-minute, we showed up there. Megana, why did you want to go?

Megana: I wanted to go because I feel like you read so much of this news in a vacuum, and I just think it’s important to show up when you can show up. This is a thing where it’s like a First Amendment violation. The other thing that is more concerning to me is the Nexstar television channel operator and their merger with this other company, and how powerful they’ll be. I don’t know how we protest against that.

Craig: I’m not sure it is a First Amendment violation. This is part of the problem.

John: Is it an indirect First Amendment violation? Because Carr and the FCC had threatened to pull licenses unless they did X, Y, or Z.

Craig: They didn’t do that. That’s actually why the FCC is there. You don’t have the right to use the public airways to say whatever you want. You have to conform to whatever. This is why I don’t like the fact that broadcast networks are there. By the way, broadcast networks have been doing this forever. Ask the Smothers Brothers. You can’t. They’re dead. The Smothers Brothers were taken off the air in 1969 because they kept talking about the Vietnam War in a way that the government didn’t like.

They were taken off the air and taken off the air at the height of their popularity. This is a thing. What’s going to happen between this with Jimmy Kimmel and the fact that Stephen Colbert lost his job, which is insane. Obviously, that was designed to help the CBS Paramount merger go through with Skydance. Who’s going to want to do a late-night talk show on network television now, other than Jimmy Fallon? It’s a real problem.

John: Yes. Obviously, you can pull that down and say that “Oh, there are economic factors at play as well. The late-night shows are not profitable the way they used to be, and all that stuff, whatever.”

Craig: They’re profitable.

John: At least they had the fig leaf of saying, “Oh, Colbert, it’s for business reasons, not for any other political reasons why we’re doing it.” Here, they’re not attempting to do that. It was clearly in reaction to this uproar, this manufactured uproar over.

Craig: It’s a manufactured uproar. It is also a manufactured uproar that follows a long-standing hatred of Jimmy Kimmel from people on the right. They don’t like the fact that he makes fun of Donald Trump because they’re incredibly sensitive. You know the people with the F Your Feelings T-shirts? Yes, they’re super sensitive. I suspect we may be looking at the end here of broadcast late-night television because I don’t think anybody good will ever want to do that job.

John: How does Saturday Night Live come back in the fall?

Craig: Saturday Night Live never stops coming back. Saturday Night Live is forever. They aren’t going to do a sketch that makes fun of Charlie Kirk. It’s not really what they do. They’ll make fun of ABC.

John: Yes, but if you look at the comment that was made, it wasn’t making fun of Charlie Kirk, though. It was–

Craig: I completely agree. I feel like Saturday Night Live gets a historical pass. They legitimately do make fun of everybody, but late-night talk– Also, Saturday Night Live is incredibly profitable. Late-night talk shows, I think you’re just going to see that it’s once a week on Netflix now. It’s once a week on Apple+.

Megana: Like with John Oliver.

Craig: John Oliver on HBO. John Oliver can do whatever he wants. Now, if Paramount buys Warner Brothers, I don’t think that’s–
John: Deal approved, yes.

Craig: The point is, HBO doesn’t have to worry about the FCC coming after them. The FCC can’t do a damn thing about HBO.

John: All right, let’s get some more follow-up. We have a Scriptnotes book coming out on December 2nd, and around that time, you and I want to do a live show or maybe two live shows in Los Angeles to promote the book.

Craig: Sure.

John: A question I have that I would love our listeners to help us answer is, should we do one live show on the East Side, or should we do two live shows, an East Side show and a West Side show?

Craig: Do I get a vote?

John: You get a vote.

Craig: One show.

John: Okay. [laughter] The argument for two shows is that if we could just do Dynasty Typewriter, it’s incredibly small, and it’s great if we can sell it out, but we can’t fill that many seats, and there’s probably more people who actually want to come and get a copy of the book. That’s fine.

Craig: You’re thinking Shrine Auditorium.

[laughter]

John: Yes, so Shrine Auditorium should be able to hold everybody.

Craig: You got better.

John: Basically, we need to know how many people want to come.

Craig: Get a sense of–

John: Get a sense of that. There’s now a little tally form that’s up. We’ll put a link in the show notes to it. Some people can click and say, “Oh, I want to come to a show on the East Side. I want to come to a show on the West Side. We get a sort of overall headcount. We’ll figure out whether we’re doing one show, if we’re doing two shows, and what size venue we need if we need a bigger place.

Craig: We could do one show on the West Side, too, if most people are on the West.

John: Exactly. That’s what I’m saying. We could do both.

Craig: Do you know what your mobster name is?

John: What’s this?

Craig: Johnny Two Shows.

John: Johnny Two Shows.

[laughter]

Craig: Johnny Two Shows.

John: For either of these events, we’d be partnering up with a local bookstore, and your ticket would get you a signed copy of the book. That would be probably a $32 ticket, which gets you a free copy of the book.

Craig: Oh, I like that number, 32. Very specific.

John: We have a follow-up on verticals. It’s a long one. I think probably I’m going to post this on the blog instead because, man, it’s a long one.

Craig: Those things.

John: Peter had a writing job on a vertical and actually had a better experience than the last guy we talked through. He ended up making about $15, $40 a week with benefits, which is much lower than what a WGA rate would be. Well lower. Yes. Had a reasonably good experience. He was not a WGA writer, which is good because a WGA writer shouldn’t be working on these things.

Craig: It would be against our rules.

John: It would be against our rules. I’ll put this on the blog so people can see what his experience was. Last bit of follow-up. I sent this to you yesterday, and I want to hear your reaction live on the show. Jerry wrote in, “I saw something on Instagram that I thought you and Craig might have some fun with, a digital D&D die. Basically, it is a oversized die that you roll, and it always comes with the screen side up, and that gives you the number result.” What was your impression of this D&D die?

Craig: I wanted it to do something else ultimately. I did enjoy their video because they were so excited as they were doing it.

John: They were rolling a die for no purpose.

Craig: Fighting over it and rolling a die for no purpose. I’m like, “Okay, now what happens? Now what happens?” They just kept rolling the die. There are lots of gimmick dies. What does that die do? You have to roll a die, and then you see a number. Isn’t that just what rolling a die does anyway?

John: I didn’t have sound turned on for the video, but if I were building this product, which I’m not intended to ever build, I think if you roll a 20, a critical hit, it should make a very cool sound. Then, like a sad trombone, if you roll a one.

Craig: Okay, but I just didn’t see the purpose. There are things where you got to put a little screen in there and a little random number generator. That’s not hard. I don’t know. I can’t imagine being excited. Hardcore nerds, and I think you and I qualify, my friend, when it comes to these things, we’re more interested in purchasing strange manufactured dice.

John: You and Chris Morgan and some other folks are. I could not give a crap about fancy dice.

Craig: Absolutely, nor should you. If you do, you’re looking for strange metal.

John: The lab diamond.

Craig: Yes, tungsten and weird designs that are dwarven or elvish. Look at Megana. She’s like, “Oh my God.”

Megana: This is like your crystals.

John: Yes, and literally, they are crystal dice. You have to be so careful with it because they can’t roll against each other because they’ll chip.

Craig: These are like your crystals.

Megana: Do you have one for your birth month, Craig?

Craig: No, I don’t even know what my birthstone is. What’s my birthstone? I was born in April. I’m terrified that it’s diamond. I think it might be diamond.

Megana: Yes, you’re an Aries.

John: It is the diamond.

Craig: It’s diamond. I can’t afford diamond dice.

John: No one can.

Megana: Dungeons & Dragons dice. That’s incredible.

Craig: No one’s made diamond dice.

Megana: Lab-grown.

Craig: What?

Megana: A lab-grown diamond dice.

Craig: Think of how big the– Each diamond has to be the size of the Hope Diamond. [laughter] Because they’re enormous. It’s like an 800-carat diamond is your D20. It’s been like, careful. I don’t. I don’t.

Megana: Now people know what to get you for Christmas.

John: It would be really challenging to engrave the diamond.

Craig: You have to engrave it with another diamond? [laughter] How do you even see what it is? Chris Morgan has the shiny, crystally glass. They’re beautiful. They reflect a million bits of light.

John: Incredibly hard to read.

Craig: Hard to read. The D4, which is a pyramid, is pointy enough to hurt you.

John: Yes, you could drop a lot of the D4.

Craig: Yes, I like that one.

John: That is not an existential threat, but let’s get to our actual meta topic about existential threats.

Craig: I’m going to call that segue man.

John: Megana, would you read what Donna wrote?

Megana: Donna writes, “Hi, John and Craig. I’m still deep in my quest to finish all your back episodes, and today I listened to Episode 334, Worst Case Scenarios. In it, you might recall you talked about a plague and AI, among other potential screenwriting death knells. Since both of those things are now part of our reality, I wondered if it’s worth revisiting this idea from eight years ago. To see how much more real the threats you named feel, and if there are any new ones, and if you would up your percentages on their likely effects on screenwriting careers.”

John: Great. I went back and looked at the transcript for 334. This is pre-pandemic, pre-Zoom, and we were really close on a lot of things. We talked about scenarios in which there’s no screenwriting happening anymore because the world has so fundamentally changed. I’m walking dead and sort of post-apocalyptic.

Craig: Zombies.

John: The luxury of screenwriting. It’s just not a thing that anyone would do. We also talked about economic collapse, some of the Great Depression, but of course, there were still movies being made during the Great Depression.

Craig: Loads.

John: We talked about scenarios in which there were still movies, but screenwriters were no longer being hired, either because they were all being hired from overseas, or there would be AI. For 2018, we were dead on with AI. You said, “I think AI, I’m just guessing here, will never get better than mediocre.” Mediocre would be amazing, by the way. The fact that a computer could be a mediocre writer would be amazing. That was Craig in 2018.

Craig: I think I nailed it on that one. Currently, AI is amazingly mediocre, and that is amazing.

John: Yes. I would say that the written material generated by AI is much better quality than I would have assumed, and yet it does not have a human quality. That’s a challenging thing to achieve.

Craig: Not yet. No.

John: We talked about whether the WGA could cease to exist, perhaps being eliminated by a government fiat. Lots on the table. We were squishy on our timeframe for things. Between 5 and 20 years, which is a big range considering how fast things are moving.

Craig: Sure. What year was this?

John: 2018?

Craig: Here we are seven years later.

John: Things are still around.

Craig: I think for a couple of guys predicting things, it’s not too bad.

John: You had said our percentage chance for civilization-ending events was between 2% and 5%. Is that a range you still would hold yourself in?

Craig: Yes.

John: An economic event that ends all movies. We were at one–

Craig: Sorry, I’m going to go up on that, actually. I’m going to go 5% to 10% because of AI. If they continue to shift, for instance, the control of weapons of mass destruction to systems that are even vaguely AI, much less fully AI, then we are entering a danger zone. I’m going to go up on that one.

John: Yes. I haven’t read the book yet, but–

Craig: I’d say 7.5%.

John: By the time this comes out, everyone will be talking about If Anyone Builds It, Everyone Dies, which is a new book about superintelligence and why we need to avoid superintelligence. I think I wasn’t sticking AI in the catastrophic risk back in 2018. I certainly would put it very high there.

Craig: Have I talked about Douglas Hofstadter and his whole thing about AI?

John: No. What’s this?

Craig: Douglas Hofstadter is a brilliant man, professor. He wrote the book Gödel, Escher, Bach, which is a famous rumination on art and early artificial intelligence. He always felt that it was never going to get better than a certain thing. He was always the guy who was like, “Everyone, please stop worrying.” Now, I read [laughs] an entry of him where he said, “It’s all I worry about every day. It’s all I think about every day, and I’m pretty sure we’re doomed.”

That doesn’t feel good.

John: No, not a bit.

Craig: I’m not saying he’s necessarily right, but I do marvel at the stupidity of the way we’re just all rushing towards this because I don’t even know why we’re doing it. They keep telling me that AI is going to make things better. Every stupid app I have is like, “Now we can do AI.” I’m like, “For what? I don’t need it.”

John: I think you need to distinguish between cheap commercial consumer applications of AI to the hard science, the mathematics, the engineering kinds of things that it does demonstrate some real capabilities to in ways that are both useful, but also much more dangerous. Those are the real concerns. We shouldn’t go too deep into this in this podcast because it’ll go way off the rails. Yes, you do have to be concerned both in what the current systems can do and how the destabilizing and bad effects of them, but also be mindful of a meteor that’s coming, which is–

Craig: We do always have to worry about the meteor. The only thing that gives me hope about any of these things is that there is a wall, a wall we can’t see that is inherent to the way that these things function. Once they hit that wall, they can go no further. There is that AI may begin to feed on itself and just create recursive slop and thus suicide.

John: I’m not convinced that wall exists.

Craig: We’ll find out.

John: I don’t want to find out. [laughter]

Craig: You’re going to.

John: An economic event that stops all movies. We’d said 1%. Will bad economic events happen? Almost certainly. I think we’re headed towards one.

Craig: An economic event to stop movies?

John: I think we’re headed to a bad economic time, but will that stop movies? No.

Craig: We’re always headed to a bad economic time and a good one. That’s inevitable. Man, if the pandemic couldn’t kill movies, at this point, I’m going to go ahead and say they are immortal. They just seem immortal.

John: International writers taking all of the domestic writers’ jobs.

Craig: No, it doesn’t seem to be happening at all.

John: It’s not happening either. AI doing the job of screenwriters. You said 1%. I didn’t give a percent back in 2018. I think we will see examples of material that’s being generated by these machines doing some of the stuff that screenwriters would normally do. I think that’s bad, but I don’t think it’s catastrophic for the industry. I think if we survive AI, screenwriters will survive AI as well. Because so much of what we do is not just sticking words after each other. It’s actually being able to intuit what people need, what this movie feels like.

It’s being able to predict how this will actually work on a screen.

Craig: Yes. Also, I think humans are required to create things that people didn’t know they wanted. That’s the big advantage we have. We just invent things that no one realized. One thing that’s helped shore this up is that the Writers Guild, which still exists, has made it so that companies really can’t use AI.

If that all collapses, I suppose that’s the end of that. I’m going to put that at 5% now. It is encouraging to note that in this era of AI obsession, no one’s really going, “Hey.”
The con artists and the startups are all like, “We can do–” but nobody that actually runs these companies and makes money, no serious people are saying, “Let’s have ChatGPT write a screenplay.”

John: That’s absolutely true. You see things like the Lion’s Fate of it all, no one’s talking about end-to-end this stuff. Even in 2018, we were talking about the risk of a new form of entertainment that’s coming out of either AI or some other way that basically takes the place of movies and television, or the time and attention, which I think is a genuine worry. I think it’s absolutely possible that something else is just so compelling that you don’t want to sit and watch a movie for two hours, or you don’t want to watch even a half-hour TV show, the way that TikTok can suck up all of your time.

Craig: That’s a real thing. I don’t think people quite yet understand how much time is going to be taken up by Grand Theft Auto VI. I’m not joking. Grand Theft Auto VI-

John: Production will plummet.

Craig: -is going to hit our time consumption as a civilization.

John: Is it 2027 now?

Craig: I thought it was 2026, but late. We’ll have to check. When it happens, it’s going to be insane.

John: Traffic accidents will drop temporarily, but then increase.

Craig: [laughs] After you play GTA, you get in your car, you have to just remind yourself, “I’m not allowed to hit pedestrians.” Also, red lights are serious. They’re not suggestions.

John: No, you really have to [crosstalk]

Craig: You have to actually stop at the red light because in Grand Theft Auto, nobody stops. If you stop at a red light, you’re an idiot. You got places to go. You know how you get away from the police, Megana?

Megana: I do not.

Craig: While they’re chasing you pull into some sort of auto body shop, close the garage, repaint your car, you roll out, police never know. It’s not how law enforcement works, actually.

Megana: It’s kind of clever.

John: Absolutely.

Craig: Works in [crosstalk]

John: You got a good heist movie. Lastly, talked about the end of the WGA back in 2018. You said a 4% chance that there’s no WGA in the future. I would increase that a bit. I just feel like there’s, with the anti-union sentiment and the sense of some way to say that it’s anti-competitive, whatever, that the existence of unions is anti-competitive, by government fiat, I think there’s a reason why WGA–

Craig: Ultimately, it comes down to the courts. If the courts decide that the NLRB can be overturned or whatever, which they’re contemplating, then, yes, I could see the end of unions. The problem with the end of unions is that there are going to be strikes. Unions aren’t going to go quietly. What you don’t want if you are running a government is all the unions striking all at once, because then it is cats and dogs sleeping together in a nightmare. I think they’re going to want to allow unions. Let’s not forget that unions are also useful to businesses.

John: Absolutely. Predictability.

Craig: Predictability, and they create both a floor and a ceiling, which is helpful. The ceilings are great for business. Sure, Amazon, Meta, all these guys, they hate labor unions. They’re also trying to hire people for $500 million. Do you know what I mean? Maybe they should rethink their stupid obsession with no unions. I’m going to put it at 5%.

John: All right.

Megana: All of your percentages are so low.

Craig: Yes. Well, because they should be.

Megana: Is the world ending?

Craig: If you say there’s a 50-50 shot the WGA won’t exist in whatever five years, that goes in deadline. That’s a big deal.

John: Yes. Even low percentages can be absolutely terrifying. I was reading a blog post. I don’t see if I can find a link to it. It was basically arguing that if you think there is even a 50% chance of this terrible thing happening, you should reasonably dedicate all your efforts to stopping that thing. By putting it at 5%, we’re acknowledging that this is a serious concern, but not a “stop everything until this is addressed” concern.

Craig: As John and I know, because we play D&D constantly, what we’re really saying is you’re rolling a 1 on the D20.

John: That happens.

Craig: All the time.

Megana: Yes. This is really nice because I have a friend who’s constantly saying that our careers won’t exist in five years.

Craig: Maybe don’t be friends with that person. They’re annoying. How does that help you?

John: It’s not helpful.

Megana: It doesn’t. It keeps me up at night.

Craig: Right. Maybe, no. Maybe, are you getting anything good out of that friend?

Megana: Yes.

Craig: Okay. Then you can tell them that you have a need, and your need is for them to stop it.

Megana: You guys think that screenwriters will be around for–

John: I do. I was actually talking about doing a New York Times opinion piece for the book. That may actually be a good topic. Like, screenwriters will still exist, assuming anything exists.

Craig: Only issue is that the machines may use that as exhibit number one when we’re put on trial and beheaded.

John: We’ll have to be careful with our words, but fortunately, we are wordsmiths. We can figure it out.

Craig: We should use ChatGPT to write that.

[laughter]

John: Good Lord. Are there new threats? I was thinking of some threats that didn’t occur to me in 2018. It was American authoritarianism. We were in the first Trump administration, but it was inept. They were trying to do bad things, but they couldn’t actually pull them off very well. I certainly underestimated the ability of motivated people to just wreck systems.

Craig: Yes. The American authoritarianism is at a high point. We’ve been here before. I always like to put things in political perspective because people think this is unprecedented. It is not. Although the manner in which it is unfolding is particularly stupid and worthy of contempt. Yes, it is a more concerning problem now, I think, than it has ever been before in my lifetime.

John: The actual– we were talking about with the Kimmel, if you want to call this government censorship, it feels like the ability of the federal government to stop speech that it doesn’t want to happen is a real thing. Complying in advance, like, we’re not going to greenlight this thing because we know it’s going to piss off something.

Craig: Yes. In the past, I think people that operated on broadcast networks were very careful. Johnny Carson never said anything that was going to get him kicked off the air. Everybody behaved with this decorum. Over time, all of us, including obviously our ridiculous president, we’ve lost all sense of decorum everywhere. Now, I’m not suggesting that Jimmy Kimmel exhibited a lack of decorum. I don’t think he did, but because we are all collectively playing it less safe, trouble is afoot.

We have an administration that is laser-focused on stuff that doesn’t matter. They are just, wow, they really need to deal with this Jimmy Kimmel problem, but not say the fact that millions of Americans are hungry. There is still an opioid crisis. Real estate’s getting stupid again. I could run down a long list of things. They laser-focus on picking up eight guys outside of a Home Depot. Wow, thank you for solving that problem.

John: Other things I would add that weren’t on my radar in 2018 would be international blockades. Our film and television industry is our biggest export, and it’s because the rest of the world wants to see our things. They don’t have to want to see the rest of our things. They could put up prohibitions to stop that from happening. If we lose the international box office, our industry changes.

Craig: Yes. We got a little bit excited about how much money was coming in from China, and that became a whole thing. Let’s take a beat for a second and point out that Hollywood, while decrying the state of affairs in the United States and censorship and all the rest, willingly, thrillingly dealt with repressive China forever, thrilled to give them censored versions of things. They censor our work in the Middle East. My show is censored when it airs in the Middle East. It makes me insane.

When I look at Hollywood wringing their hands over Jimmy Kimmel, I’m sorry, I just can’t help but think, “We don’t have clean hands here in this business.”

John: We have an expectation that when I turn on the TV, I get the real thing. [laughter] I get the real source.

Craig: You here as a privileged American, should get what you want.

John: Yes, absolutely. It’s our pretty privilege. Lastly, in 2018, I wasn’t thinking about actual war being a possibility. I do think it’s a significantly higher percentage chance that we’re in an actual war situation now than we would have been in 2018. Do you disagree?

Craig: I currently am going to lower my, because we are in an isolationist stance and a hard isolationist stance. The most hard right of the right, which seems to be the force that’s pulling things, is, as it has always been, isolationist. If this were 1999, I would say, “Oh, there’s a 40% chance we’re going to be sending troops, perhaps under the guise of NATO, into Ukraine.” There’s currently a 0% chance we do that now.

John: Yes, but I would say the odds that we have military action inside our borders is significantly higher than ever before.

Craig: That, I’m not sure what to call it exactly. That would just be military repression within the United States.

John: Let’s move on from this grim topic to something more constructive, which should be short films.

[laughter]

Craig: That is, whatever the opposite of segue man is pivot man.

John: Ian wrote in. Megana, can you read what Ian wrote?

Megana: Ian writes, “In the last few months, I’ve started resurrecting an animated short that I started a decade ago. I would love to hear your thoughts about short films. I found it very challenging to find the right balance of telling a story that is full and compelling, but simple enough to get across in 10 minutes. I would love to know what you all think makes a great short film, as opposed to a feature. Are there any structure or character considerations that you think are especially important in a short, especially in a case where there is no dialogue?”

John: All right. This is just a great question for me because I gave a presentation a couple months ago about short films specifically. I had to really think about, “Oh, what do I mean by short films? What are the characters that are different?” I’m going to run through some of these, but then I would love to have a conversation with you, Craig, about what you feel like. My basic premise is that short films are like jokes. They have setup, they have development, and they have payoff.

They need to have all three things, whether they’re funny or whether they’re horror or whatever the nature of them is. They are like jokes in that way. That setup is meeting your hero and their deal, which has to happen very quickly. Development is the change and the escalating consequences. That payoff is the release of tension that happens over the course of it.

Basically, every good short film you’re going to see is going to follow that basic pattern because that’s what your expectation is with a short film.

They’re not small versions of long movies. They don’t have three acts. They get right to it. They have ruthless compression. You open them as late as possible. You use images instead of exposition wherever you can. You’re writing a postcard, not a book. You have to frame everything around one question, one dilemma. There are no subplots. There are no supporting characters. You have to make sure you are showing versus explaining. It has to be even more so than most movies. You need to be able to understand what’s happening if you didn’t have the sound on.

It just has to really unfurl in a way that you quickly get what the question is and what the resolution of the short film is. Having watched the Academy shorts for so many years, the best ones do follow this. There’s some other ones that are like, “Why is this in there?” They’re tedious and they’re 25 minutes long, but the best ones do follow this pattern.

Craig: I like that. Like a joke, like a song. They are very focused. Ian, animation is great for short films. Ian is working in animation. One of the reasons why is because animation tends to be pure story, in no small part, because it’s expensive. Every frame costs something. You want to make sure it’s dense, calorically dense, gets to the point, delivers. Short films often do have ironic endings, twist endings, surprise endings. They also do give you space to do things without dialogue.

When you look at a movie like Flow, which is not a short film, they were able to do that without dialogue the whole way because animation is so evocative that way. WALL-E, very little dialogue until suddenly there’s a lot. Yes, in a short film, you have a chance to be a limerick, a song, a joke, whatever you want to call. Look at the other short forms of other things. Short stories, which are some of my favorite stories, are great lessons for anyone making a short film. Read Shirley Jackson.

John: The three short films I want to steer, Ian, and our listeners to, first is Lights Out, which is a horror short that later became a feature. It’s such a simple premise of there’s a monster that comes every time you turn the lights out, and it gets closer and closer. Paperman, which was, I think, probably won the Oscar. Black and white short film, no dialogue, gorgeously done. Then The Long Goodbye, which is a Riz Ahmed short film. I don’t remember if he directed it or not, but he stars in it. It just seems like a slice of life, family, and a house, and then terrible things happen.

The setup and payoff is brilliant. Examples of three very different short films, but they still have that core theme, which is that they’re very clear in what they’re trying to deliver. They’re not subplots. They’re not other things. It’s not trying to set up a bigger world. They are contained within themselves.

Craig: I think it’s good for people to consider that even though it seems like making a short film is easier than making a feature film because it’s short, the demands narratively are higher. You don’t have any wiggle room. You don’t have time to coast. You don’t have moments to luxuriate. Everything has to be intentional. Everything has to get you closer and closer to that ending, which must be a big punch to the face, a big laugh, a big cry, whatever it is.

John: That ties in very well to the question from James here.

Megana: James says, “I’m directing my first short in a couple months. I’ve spent the year saving for it and tried to think carefully about the script. I know it’s pretty good, but can’t help preoccupying myself with how I hope it might sell me. How can I validate its existence apart from festival success? I want to believe in the magic of just making a picture, but the immense financial and energetic resources required cause me to be anxious rather than excited to do more of what I like.”

John: Basically, I think James is trying to make a calling card film. It’s making a short film that will announce himself to the world. While I understand that instinct, he needs to actually just make sure that the short film he’s making is the best short film he can possibly make. That feels like he’s mistaking the outcome of the process and the actual aim of this thing.

Craig: There’s a little bit too much good therapy work and self-love in that. [laughter] Honestly, he’s worried about it being valid. No, think incredibly practically. It is a business. It’s an investment. It is a lot of money. There is nothing inherently valid about a short film. It’s either good, medium, bad. Yes, you do need to make it good. The anxiety you’re feeling is perhaps tied to the fact that you got a lot riding on this. Do the work ahead of time to stress-test it. Sit down with some folks, read it through.

Shoot a really simple version of it on the iPhone without any props or lighting or anything, and then edit that. That costs literally nothing except time and some friends who might be willing to help. Is it good? Treat it like business. It’s business. This is your career.

John: Here’s where I want to push back a little bit about “it’s business.” It’s not business in the sense that you’re going to make money off of this, because you will not make money off the short film. What you will hopefully do is make something that is so good that people want to meet with you and talk to you about doing other projects.

Craig: That’s the business.

John: That’s the business.

Craig: That’s why you’re putting money into it. You can’t put money into it just so that it exists. That’s not enough.

John: A short film, though, is also a chance to experiment, to learn. It’s a great education in how things go from being on the page to actually being on a screen. You’ve got to celebrate that as well. I look now at so many content creators who are doing stuff for TikTok or for Instagram Reels or whatever or YouTube. They’re not quite making short films. They’re doing something else that’s orthogonal to it. It’s using the same equipment but not doing the same kind of stuff.

Friends of mine did this program with a bunch of big YouTube people, where they went off and made narrative short films. They found it very difficult. It was a similar skill but not quite the same skill. Those people did have real talents of being able to understand shot by shot by shot by shot how stuff can work and cut together. Listen, James, I know you have a vision for this that’s going to put you on a path to this place. I just wouldn’t focus on that as being the main thing you’re working on with this is basically you want to do this because you want to make something good that people will watch and be entertained by.

If you do something that’s really good, it’s going to get your career moving ahead. You’ve got to focus on what is this thing, what is the thing itself, rather than what is the outcome of it.

Craig: Yes. Making it good implies that it maybe won’t be good. You have to let that in. This is really important. I think that there’s this toxic positivity thing that happens where people are like, I had an idea and therefore– Maybe it’s a bad idea. I can tell he is because he’s scared. That’s the best news of all. That fear, that’s useful. It’s useful fear. It’s telling you something. Listen to it.

John: We have one last one that’s on topic here. This is Matt from Boston.

Megana: Matt writes, “I’m an emerging screenwriter who’s written a handful of feature scripts, some of which have received interest from managers and production companies. I recently received an email from a producer asking if I have a concept trailer for one of my scripts. In the email, the person explained they produce concept trailers for writers who have high-scoring, unproduced scripts and are looking for a new way to cut through the noise and get their projects the attention they deserve.”

Craig: Oh God.

Megana: “I understand the usefulness of directors such as Damien Chazelle with Whiplash creating proof-of-concept short films, but I’m wondering how helpful creating a concept trailer would be for a screenwriter. I believe the focus should remain on writing and developing the best script possible. Curious to get your thoughts on this.”

John: Two separate things here.

Craig: Just so I’m clear, somebody emails him back and goes, “Hey, you know what you should do? You should pay us.” That’s like when you get an email that says, “Congratulations, we want to include you in the who’s who of America. You give us $1,000, and you can be in the–” just a rip-off. That’s just a straight-up con artist rip-off. I hate these companies that prey on people. I loathe them. Loathe bottom feeders.

John: Let’s acknowledge that, set that aside. Don’t pay this producer person. Let’s talk in a general sense about concept trailers or little short films that show the proof-of-concept for something. I think they can be valid, especially for something that you realistically could shoot yourself, that you’re trying to raise money for to shoot as indie film. I think it makes sense if that’s a thing you actually want to do. What I worry about is that we start to create a whole bunch of other auxiliary industries for these people. Not only do you have to be a really good screenwriter, but you also have to be able to write and produce and direct these other little short things, which is not the job of a writer.

Craig: I’ll tell you the kind of script that doesn’t need a concept trailer, a good one. Because a good script is the proof of concept. If it’s good, it’ll work. Nobody has ever read a really good script and gone, “Oh my God, this is great,” but I need a proof-of-concept.

John: Here’s the question. The reason why the proof-of-concept trailers happen is because it’s to get you to read the script. That, I think, is a valid thing, and there are examples of people who’ve done it.

Craig: If anybody refuses to read a script unless they see a proof-of-concept trailer–

John: They’re not refusing to read it. They’re not interested in reading it.

Craig: Then who are those people?

John: They are people who value their reading time. They’re not going to read a thing until they see a thing. They would rather spend Lights Out, which is the little short that I mentioned before. It’s basically a proof-of-concept thing. It’s like a 90-second thing. People spend 90 seconds to do a thing.

Craig: Yes. If you have a high concept, it can be–

John: That’s the reason why I think you do it.

Craig: I still think that our business largely runs on people reading.

John: Yes, it does.

Craig: Part of what happens here is everybody is desperate to exert control over the process. There is no control over the process. The only way you can truly exert control over the process is by writing something undeniably good. That’s it.

John: We’re not in disagreement there. I do think that in certain genres and for really high-concept ideas, a trailer, a short film could be a good way to pique interest in it.

Craig: Spend as little money as possible.

John: Or you do a thing where you make a short that actually is good in and of itself. That goes to festivals-

Craig: That’s different.

John: -and people say, “Oh, well, this is a good short, and I would love to see the feature version of that.”

Craig: That’s the Whiplash method, and that’s fine. You can absolutely make a short film that you then are like, “Look, I have a feature version of this. That is, in and of itself, a whole thing, but just for a script that is good? Just like, hey, read the first five pages. There’s my little teaser.

John: Let’s answer our listener question from Martin. He’s writing about staff writers’ salaries.

Megana: Martin asks, “We now have TV shows like Severance and Shogun that might yield one season of output over a three-year period. Presumably, the writers are working on that material the entire time. Are the salaries for the writers on those shows structured in such a way that it is a living/desirable wage for a person in this industry at that level? Are those people forced to find other work while they work on their eight scripts over a three-year period?”

John: Martin has a presumption there that is not actually correct. Presumably, the writers are working on material that entire time. That’s not how these shows work. Writers on shows like Severance or Shogun are hired for a writer’s room, a writing period. Maybe it’s 20 weeks, maybe it’s longer than that. On shows like this, they’re basically getting all the scripts written ahead of time. Those writers go away, and then it’s left to the showrunners and maybe another producer to stay on board to actually make the rest of the shows.

We’ve had many showrunners come on the show talking about how it’s a real struggle to get the studio to pay for it. I need another writer on set to help me out here. Ms. Hannah has talked about that.

Craig: Which I think we now have mandated to some amount. The last strike, in no small part, was about addressing some of these issues because it had become an enormous problem, particularly in the case of what they call mini rooms, which is a really bad name for what it is. It’s not descriptive, but pre-green light rooms where writers were not being paid, or they were being paid for a week, but then they would be held exclusive for these long stretches of time where they couldn’t do anything else. Then the show wouldn’t go.

We’ve done quite a bit of work on the union side to address some of those things. John’s right. There is some fundamental misunderstandings here. Why does Severance take three years? Because they shoot slowly. Production is the longest phase. That’s the same for me and my show. That’s the same for Justin and his show. That’s just how it goes. Because I write and Justin writes and Dan Erickson writes, the primary writer is there constantly going while the show is being shot.

Yes, you don’t hold a full-size room throughout the course of production. Nobody does that because of the way these shows are made. It used to be that you would because shows were made so quickly. There are still shows that function like that.

John: Yes, Tracker on CBS.

Craig: Sure. Tracker on CBS. That is–

John: It’s a big room that’s constantly writing, and they’re writing as they’re shooting.

Craig: Because they’re making 22 episodes a season, because their production is about, I’m going to guess, 8 days an episode, maybe 9. For a show like Severance, their production is probably between 20 and 30 days an episode, sometimes maybe even more. Same goes for me. Same goes for Shogun. That’s how that functions. Because of that, no. That’s why it takes so long in between these shows, because of the scale of them or just the nature of how they go. For those shows, no.

John: Overall, I’d say Martin’s instinct was right. It feels like it would be a problem. How would you possibly make it work? It was a problem, and so we had to address it.

Craig: We definitely fixed some things. The good news here is that writers who work on these shows for, let’s say, 20 weeks, when they’re done, they go work on another show, hopefully, for another 20 weeks. They’re not held. Basically, it’s not like they work on a show for 20 weeks, and then they have to wait until that show has finished production for them to go and do another job.

John: Megana, you had this experience firsthand because you worked on a show for a writer’s room for a time, and then while that show was still shooting, you were off on another show.

Megana: Right. Yes. To get back to Martin’s question, though, about whether this is structured in a way that’s like a living desirable wage, I would still say no.

John: Because the real challenge, if you’re constantly hopping from show to show to show, it’s hard to piece together enough work over the course of a year to do it. It’s better than it was before, where people were being held on things and they couldn’t actually pursue other work, but it’s still really challenging.

Megana: Also, in our industry, you give 25% to your reps, your lawyers, and California taxes, et cetera, et cetera. I think for a lot of people in this industry, they are going a couple of years without finding work. To answer your second question, I think you are forced to find other sources of income.

Craig: Yes. The availability of work is the problem. If you could fill 50 weeks of the year, you would make a living wage.

John: If you could fill 40 weeks of the year, you would probably make a living wage.

Megana: 20 weeks.

Craig: Or 20. Finding those jobs is hard because there are not a lot of them.

John: There are many fewer than there were a few years ago.

Craig: Therefore, the competition for them is more intense. Therefore, people who have more experience are now competing for the same jobs that rookies are competing for. That squeeze is the problem that our membership faces. What the Writers’ Guild can do is negotiate how much you get paid a week if you’re getting paid, and how many weeks at a minimum you’re going to be paid for. Beyond that, what they can’t do is help you get a job. When the industry contracts and the jobs contract, then it becomes brutal.

I’ve heard nothing good from folks out there. Look, I’m happy that I was able to employ people. I think we employed them for 20 weeks. We’re just a show. You know what may be a good sign, actually? Let’s think about something positive for a moment. The Pitt won the Emmy for Best Drama, which I thought was fantastic. The Pitt is a new thing. It is halfway between the old model and the new model. Therefore, it is the new model, which is we’re going to do 15 episodes. We’re not doing 6 to 10. We’re also not doing 22. We’re doing 15.

That means we do need more writers, and it is going to run longer. Okay, I don’t think anybody’s thinking that we’re going to be able to fill all the network schedules with Dick Wolf shows that run 22 episodes a season, but this new model may catch on.

John: Yes, and are shot here in Los Angeles.

Craig: Well, that’s the most wonderful thing. That’s a whole other discussion, though.

John: Let’s take one last question. This is from Lawant about URLs.

Megana: Lawant writes, “This feels like a very basic and answerable question. How does film and TV production deal with fictional URLs? I’m currently co-writing a movie about hacking that has a significant amount of screen time dedicated to what’s happening on computer monitors, which includes hacking over the internet. Are we liable if we use URLs that either someone else or nobody owns? As in, while we’re not showing anything illegal on those sites, could a company that owns a URL we show give us trouble? Is there an equivalent to the 555 phone numbers used on TV?”

John: In most cases, Lawant, you’re actually just registering the URL. You’re picking things that aren’t being used for other things, and you’re just actually getting them yourself. I own a bunch of URLs for things I need to do for projects, including Arlo Finch stuff, and it’s $10 a year or whatever. I just hold onto a bunch of these, and I suspect that’s what the legal counsel will ask you to do on any show.

Craig: This is a not problem. You don’t even have to spend the $10. I would say, hey, don’t use a URL that exists because, yes, it could be an issue. You just put whatever you want in there. You can always go www3 dot, dah, da, dah. Throw another symbol in there or whatever, just to change it up. Ultimately, that’s the production’s issue. They’ll make sure that they find things that are clearable and ownable and controllable. They can even use those things as Easter egg sites for people that want to dive in. This is not an issue.

John: Time for one cool thing. My one cool thing is called Maccy. It is a clipboard manager for your Mac. It is free. You should download it and install it. Craig, I don’t know if you use a clipboard manager.

Craig: I’ve tried so many times.

John: Once you get used to it, basically, a clipboard manager means when you copy something and paste it just holds onto everything that you’ve copied. You can go back like, “Oh, that’s the thing I needed.” It’s because so often you need to copy and paste two things, and rather than go back and forth, you just do that.

Craig: I think I said one of these years ago on the show. It was one cool thing. I just can’t find one that just–

John: This is the one you should use.

Craig: It’s called Maccy.

John: Maccy, M-A-C-C-Y.

Craig: For a MacBook.

John: It’s only for Mac.

Craig: Got it. M-A-C-C-Y.

John: Basically, Command-V is paste, Shift-Command-V or whatever else you want is open this, and just puts up a list of all the recent things in your clipboard. You can paste those in. That’s what it looks like.

Megana: This is incredible.

John: It’s so useful. The reason I’m mentioning it today is I updated my system software, and suddenly my clipboard manager wasn’t working on it. I had no idea what the name of the app was that I was actually using. It’s just been so invisible. There, it just feels like my computer’s broken if I don’t have this installed.

Craig: Okay, Maccy. That is now my one cool thing because if that works–

John: It is free and open source.

Craig: If this works–

John: You will be amazed at how much more productive you are.

Craig: I’m emailing myself to get Maccy. This is good. I’m doing it. I’m using that. That’s it. I’m stealing it.

John: That’s your one cool thing.

Craig: That’s my money. It’s cooler than anything I can think of. That’s awesome.

John: Do you have one cool thing you want to share with us?

Megana: Sure. I watched this documentary on Devo last night on Netflix. I would highly recommend it. It is a little bit depressing because it’s about this group of artists who didn’t quite get their message across. I found it uplifting in that it reminded me that artists have always struggled against the US government. This is not the first time. This is not the last. If you’re trying to do something new and inventive, it will probably be misunderstood, and you won’t find commercial success.

John: What was the name of the documentary again?

Megana: I think it’s just called Devo.

John: Devo. Just the band?

Megana: Yes. Are you familiar with Devo?

John: I know what they are. I can’t say I’m a fan, but I recognize them as being–

Craig: There are some fans of Devo. Maybe because of my age, I was just a little young.

John: Yes, same.

Craig: I never quite understood what the hell was going on there. Although, like everybody our age, I assume you went to a roller skate birthday party and you heard Whip It. Whip It, real good.

Megana: I would recommend this documentary. It’s really good.

John: All right. I’ll check it out.

Megana: I’ve always been a Devo fan because they’re little art freaks from Ohio.

John: Yes. Good stuff.

Craig: You must whip it.

John: Awesome.

Craig: You must whip it.

John: That is our show for this week. Scriptnotes is produced this week by Megana Rao, normally by Drew Marquardt, edited by Matthew Chilelli. Outro this week is by Luke Davis. If you have an outro, you can send us a link to ask at johnaugust.com. That is also the place where you can send questions like the ones we answered today. You’ll find transcripts at johnaugust.com along with our sign-up for a weekly newsletter called Interesting, which has lots of links to things about writing. You can find clips and other helpful video on our YouTube. Just search for Scriptnotes and give us a follow.

You will also find us on Instagram @Scriptnotes Podcast. We have T-shirts and hoodies, and drinkware. You can find all those at Cotton Bureau. You’ll find the show notes with the links to all the things we talked about today in the email you get each week as a premium subscriber. Thank you, premium subscribers. You make it possible for us to do things like transcripts where we can go back and look at what did we actually say in 2018.

Craig: What did we say?

John: What did we say? We have transcripts all the way back to episode one. You can sign up to become a premium member at scriptnotes.net where you get all those backup episodes and bonus segments like the one we’re about to record on intermission. Megana, thanks again for producing today.

Megana: Thank you guys for having me on.

Craig: Legend.

Megana: The Banshee.

Craig: The Banshee.

[Bonus Segment]

John: All right, intermissions. We were driving back from the Jimmy Kimmel protest yesterday, and we were thinking about what is the bonus topic going to be? We went through a lot of different options. I think because we’re both excited to see the new Paula Thomas Anderson movie, which is three hours long without an intermission, we thought we should talk about intermissions and intermissions as a concept for movies, but also for stage productions.

Craig: I love them.

John: Yes, I like them too.

Craig: I love an intermission. An intermission, first and foremost, lets you pee. That’s huge. Everybody gets in that place where they’re like, “Okay, I got to pee. I am trying to suss out if I am just hitting the right three-minute moment to run out, pee, run back in.

John: Mike, for a long movie, he’ll go to the site that tells you where you should pee. For the Marvel movies, especially, it’ll tell you this is when to run out.

Craig: I think you run at any point. No offense to Marvel movies, but you know.

John: You don’t want to miss the cool big moment.

Craig: I think you’re going to run out at the end. You don’t run to pee during the climactic action. I love an intermission for that reason. I also think for certain movies, you need an intermission to just, woo, because–

John: I thought The Brutalist’s intermission was very smartly done. Also, it’s like the movie really is in two parts. You’re introducing a new major character after the intermission.

Craig: It lets you restart, which, as we’ve talked about, beginnings are great. It gives you a place to have a little bit of an ending. My first intermission, the one that is seared into my brain, was when I saw Gandhi. I was a kid, and I’d never been to a movie that was– I don’t know how long Gandhi was. Gandhi, like three and a half hours long or something. I got to that intermission, and I was just like, I need this moment to just breathe and go, “Whoa.” Then go back in. I was so excited to go back in.

It was like it was a chance to just get ready for more. Because there is also, there’s only so much your brain can handle without just taking a little bit of a break. That’s why I love a musical where the curtain comes down. It gives you a chance to drive everybody excited and give them a chance to go pee and talk amongst themselves, and then get back into it.

John: I’m a fan of intermissions, but having now gone through Big Fish, the musical, doing a version that’s one act, it is so interesting to look at how the form of the intermission breaks musicals and forces patterns that are maybe not natural. In the two-act version of Big Fish, I love it, but we have to get up to this moment where the end of act one, it has to be a big song, a big moment, a big decision point that’s setting up for, “Oh, you want to come back after the intermission to see what pays off.” It is an artificial construct to do it.

It can’t just stop. It has to really start. Then you have to come into the second act with, there’s an expectation of size and scope and welcome back to the thing. Cutting those moments out of this one-act version, it’s like, oh, there’s sustained tension about the question the entire time through. That is a nice difference. I like both versions of it, but it’s just, you notice how much you are forcing things into a specific pattern when you have to have the intermission.

Megana: We were talking about this yesterday where you were saying The Brutalist is designed to have an intermission because it’s two distinct parts. Aren’t most movies, like you are working towards a midpoint where there’s going to be some sort of reversal or–

John: I also feel like the midpoint is a construct that was created by, I don’t know if it’s Sid Fields specifically, but I don’t think midpoints are really a thing the way that act rates are a thing.

Craig: Yes. They’re rarely divided in the middle. On Broadway, the first act is always longer than the second act.

John: For a theatrical film, the classic paradigm is that the first 30 pages is your first act and there’s not a cadence anymore. Then the next 60 pages are the second act, and the last 30 pages are the third act. Sure, sort of. It feels nice and symmetrical to say that at 60, there’s some sort of midpoint turn. I don’t find that in the movies I’ve written or most movies I’ve seen, I can really point out what that is.

Craig: No. In my How to Write a Movie 1, talk about it like how in the middle of a movie, generally, a character starts to realize they can’t go back, but they’re afraid of going forward. That’s not like a big plot thing necessarily.

Megana: Something you could have an intermission around.

Craig: Right. I don’t recall what scene was the last scene of the first part of Gandhi, but in my sense memory, it wasn’t designed for an intermission. It was sort of like, “We need an intermission, where can we put it?” “Here.” Which I was fine with.

John: It’s also worth thinking about, there were probably actual mechanical things they needed to think about. We saw Gandhi on film. Film was shipping on these giant reels. At a certain point, they literally needed to switch over what’s happening, or they needed to cut things together onto bigger plates. I just went and saw an old Hitchcock movie, Suspicion, over at Tarantino’s Theater. You realize, “Oh, that’s right.” We used to have to change reels. We used to have to do all these different things. An intermission is actually a chance to do physical things that needed to happen with film that aren’t necessary anymore.

Craig: They have. Obviously, you have the whole alternating reel thing, but it may also– I don’t know. I don’t know how did projectors need a moment to cool off or with the bulb burnout. I don’t know.

John: In the business model, they wanted people to go buy concessions, too.

Craig: That’s the other thing. If you run a movie that’s 3 and a half hours long, that movie costs the same as a movie that costs 90 minutes. That’s a problem for you as a theater owner. You’re absolutely right. You’re giving people a chance to go buy some more stuff because they don’t want films that long. It helps the exhibitors accept the film.

John: Notably, we have very long movies that don’t have intermission. A lot of James Cameron movies are very long and don’t have intermissions. They could be designed for it. You can imagine a version of Titanic that includes intermission.

Craig: Oh, absolutely. I think intermissions are dramatic. I think intermissions say, you are at the theater. This is special.

John: The other nice thing about an intermission is the filmmaker is making a decision about, this is the right moment to get up and leave, to go to the bathroom, to have a conversation, to do something else. When you’re watching a movie at home, you can just pause it at any point and do those things. You don’t know if this is a good moment to do it. If you knew that there was going to be a natural spot in there, you might do it better. TV has always been written for act breaks for that reason. You write up to the act breaks and they’re artificial, but they–

Craig: Commercials were 12 intermissions on a show.

Megana: There used to always be intermissions in India. I think for Western movies I saw in India, it would just be wherever they wanted to put it.

John: Talk to us about seeing Indian movies in India. How long is the total experience? Is there just one intermission? Is there going to be multiple intermissions? How would it work?

Megana: Yes. It used to seem like Bollywood movies were so long, but now most Hollywood movies are the same length. I would say two and a half, three hours. Watching a movie in an Indian theater is the most fun you’ll ever have. People are dancing and singing, and they’re in the aisles. You have a 15-minute intermission. It makes the experience an event. You go out and get snacks. There’s always such good food at Indian movie theaters. Then you can use the restroom and come back. Usually in Bollywood movies, the second half of the movie is the very sad, melodramatic part. That’s when you come back, and then you start crying.

John: The films you’re describing, they are written with an intermission. It’s not just that we’re stopping at a random place. You feel like they’re actually structured to have an intermission.

Megana: They are written with an intermission. What is that Jennifer Lopez movie with the snake?

Craig: Oh, Anaconda?

John: Anaconda, yes.

Megana: Anaconda, yes. I remember seeing Anaconda in theaters in India.

Craig: They just threw one in there?

Megana: Yes.

Craig: How long was Anaconda?

John: No, Anaconda is probably a 90-minute movie.

Megana: Yes, but it’s good for you to go get a snack and talk about things.

Craig: Listen, everybody needs a snack. I looked up, so–

Megana: I can’t believe I forgot Anaconda.

John: Yes. There’s a new Anaconda coming. I’m very excited for the new Anaconda. The trailer looks very, very funny.

Craig: 1982, Gandhi’s intermission was at the 1-hour and 31-minute mark.

John: That feels right.

Craig: It was followed by a three-minute musical interlude over a black screen before the second part of the film began. Basically, go pee, come back. However, this intermission was omitted for most subsequent releases. It was special. It was special.

John: I remember in the start of the program, we had to talk about plans for a re-release of a classic film. I chose Gone with the Wind. My proposal was rather than split it with the intermission, you should actually make it Gone with the Wind Part I and Gone with the Wind Part II.

Craig: Like two different nights?

John: Two different nights.

Craig: Sure.

Megana: More ticket sales.

John: Do it. Absolutely.

Craig: More ticket sales. Listen, we’re show people. We’re carnival barkers. Anything that works. Anything that works.

John: Including the intermission.

Craig: Including throwing an intermission into Anaconda.
[laughter]

John: Now for our intermission. Thank you, Craig. Thank you, Megana.

Megana: Thank you both.

Craig: Thanks, guys.

Links:

  • Remembering Sundance Institute Founder, Robert Redford
  • John’s post on Robert Redford
  • Digital Dungeons and Dragons Die
  • Tally to vote for Scriptnotes Live Shows
  • Scriptnotes Episode 334, Worst Case Scenarios, Transcript
  • Maccy App
  • DEVO Documentary on Netflix
  • Megana Rao on Instagram and X
  • Preorder the Scriptnotes Book!
  • Get a Scriptnotes T-shirt!
  • Check out the Inneresting Newsletter
  • Become a Scriptnotes Premium member, or gift a subscription
  • Subscribe to Scriptnotes on YouTube
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  • Outro by Luke Davis (send us yours!)
  • Scriptnotes is produced by Drew Marquardt and edited by Matthew Chilelli.

Email us at ask@johnaugust.com

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